[LargeFormat] Cleaning Metal
Pete Caluori
largeformat@f32.net
Fri Mar 29 09:24:11 2002
From: "Emerson Valley" <valleye@mnsi.net>
Reply-To: largeformat@f32.net
To: <largeformat@f32.net>
Subject: RE: [LargeFormat] Cleaning Metal
Date: Fri, 29 Mar 2002 09:15:01 -0500
Take them to a jeweler. If they are heilooms I am sure you would not want
to destroy them with a houshold cleaner that you were told to use by someone
on the internet.
-----Original Message-----
From: largeformat-admin@f32.net [mailto:largeformat-admin@f32.net]On
Behalf Of rstein
Sent: Friday, March 29, 2002 8:01 AM
To: largeformat@f32.net
Subject: [LargeFormat] Cleaning Metal
Dear Friends,
Let me inject a serious note to the list.
There. Keep that on the screen for the next half hour and don't have
any
hot drinks until lunch. Yes, it always swells and bleeds like that and no,
you don't look funny.
Now to the real question. Verdigris.
I have a couple of pairs of turn-of-the-last-century opera glasses that
are family heirlooms. They have mother of pearl inlays and gold work, but
there must be some brass in there as there are also some green corroded
areas. Well, that is a capsule commentary on the family, really, but I want
to clean them up for use as props in the studio.
Does anyone know what can be used to clean this sort of thing? I would
like to avoid disassembly if possible.
Is this also applicable to older brass-barreled lenses? I have a couple
of oddities given to me that might be usable if they could be salvaged.
Thanks in advance for the technical assistance.
Uncle Dick
Greetings Uncle Dick,
If these are heilooms, then surely you'll want to treat them appropriately.
If however you want to tinker, there's a product sold in the USA called
Brasso. I don't know if it's available in your neck of the woods, but it's
a good brass cleaner.
Regards, Pete
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