
by
Rakkasan187
Bodey,
As far as the ribbons there is not much you can do at this point but I will recommend that instead of displaying the uniform on a mannequin which is a nice idea but rather invest in a museum quality garment box for uniforms/coats/tunics etc. and lay the uniform flat in the box and cover the coat with acid free tissue paper.
You will have to go through a museum supply place like University Products or Gaylord for the large garment box. I would also take a photo of the uniform and place it in a document protector taped to the cover of the box.
I am a curator in a US Army museum and we see this type of deterioration quite often, especially with ribbons and medals that are suspended on the uniform. After time the thread looses it's tinsel strength and they start to separate, fray and become very unstable. The Center of Military History for which I work have published guidelines for its museum's to place uniforms/textiles from the American Revolution forward up to WW1 flat in order to properly conserve them and to prevent strain and separation of the threads in the arms, shoulders, seams and other areas which would normally fill out by a person or in this case a mannequin.
Conservation of these uniforms and accouterments is very labor intensive and extremely expensive.
I am actually on a lunch break right now but for the past 4 hours I have been inspecting some of the uniforms in our collection and conducting conservation reports of these very same issues with ribbons and other devices..
I hope this helps, and although the desire to display this uniform is admirable, I would recommend against it and based on your own words, "being a 100+ year old uniform and is quite fragile".. the best you can do now is to preserve this in the way mentioned above and once stored in the garment box, periodincally check on it..
Best regards, stay safe
Smitty
Bookmarks