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  2. How to Clean Tarnished Silver, According to Cleaning Experts

    www.aol.com/clean-tarnished-silver-according...

    Rub the item, then rinse in cool water and buff with a cloth until dry. For silver that is heavily tarnished, mix a paste of three parts baking soda to one part water. Wet the silver and apply the ...

  3. Conservation and restoration of silver objects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservation_and...

    Dark tarnish spots are sometimes located on the surface and may need to be polished more than once to remove. Over polishing is an issue with silver and can cause harm to the surface of the metal. After polishing, the silver object is rinsed in deionized water and dried with a cotton cloth. [12]

  4. Jewellery cleaning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewellery_cleaning

    Ultrasonic cleaners are useful for jewelry cleaning and removing tarnish. They use ultrasound waves and chemicals combined to create bubbles that "cling" to the foreign particles such as dirt, oil, and unknown substances. The high frequency waves are sent out and pull the contaminants off the object.

  5. Tarnish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarnish

    Tarnish is a product of a chemical reaction between a metal and a nonmetal compound, especially oxygen and sulfur dioxide. It is usually a metal oxide, the product of oxidation; sometimes it is a metal sulfide. The metal oxide sometimes reacts with water to make the hydroxide, or with carbon dioxide to make the carbonate. It is a chemical change.

  6. Coin cleaning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coin_cleaning

    Note the wear present, as well as tarnished areas on the "brilliant red" surface. Coin cleaning is the controversial process of removing undesirable substances from a coin's surface in order to make it more attractive to potential buyers. The subject is disputed among the numismatic community whether cleaning coins is necessary.

  7. Liming (leather processing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liming_(leather_processing)

    The result is an influx of water into the hide/skin, and a marked increase in fibre diameter and fibre shortening. The thickness of the skin increases, but the surface area of the pelt decreases. The weight increase, owing to the uptake of water, results in a doubling of the hide/skin weight.

  8. Bronze disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronze_disease

    Bronze disease is an irreversible and nearly inexorable corrosion process that occurs when chlorides come into contact with bronze or other copper-bearing alloys. [1] It can occur as both a dark green coating, or as a much lighter whitish fuzzy or furry green coating. [1]

  9. Scar free healing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scar_free_healing

    Scar free healing is the process by which significant injuries can heal without permanent damage to the tissue the injury has affected. In most healing, scars form due to the fibrosis and wound contraction, however in scar free healing, tissue is completely regenerated. During the 1990s, published research on the subject increased; it is a ...