"fullers earth" or diatomaceous earth is about the same. diatoms are quite small and have silaceous shells.Thank You! Very interesting, it's all about the details hah!
"fullers earth" or diatomaceous earth is about the same. diatoms are quite small and have silaceous shells.Thank You! Very interesting, it's all about the details hah!
Thanks Roger!At my church, we use a paste polish called Wenol. I think it is very similar to Semichrome because it is pink and smells similar. It has very positive reviews but, of course not for our purpose of polishing gravers.
Amazon.com: Wenol Metal Polish 100ml : Health & Household
'WENOL' looks promising! Read some reviews on Amazon.Thanks Roger!
Wenol metal polish, that's 10!
Thanks again Roger, I will check it out.
Sincerely ,Jim
Thanks Roger!
Wenol metal polish, that's 10!
Thanks again Roger, I will check it out.
Sincerely ,Jim
Roger, thank you for response, I am honored by your answer to me at the 'Cafe'At my church, we use a paste polish called Wenol. I think it is very similar to Semichrome because it is pink and smells similar. It has very positive reviews but, of course not for our purpose of polishing gravers.
Amazon.com: Wenol Metal Polish 100ml : Health & Household
Curious to hear your results with Schauer and Milton Bridge enamels. I found MB transparents needed to be fired at higher temps but Schauer is same as most (around 1450).Thank you! 'Farmer 57' for the tip on Shauer/Bridge Enamels,I'm trial firing them now!
Jim
Thank you for the tip! I will try it, I like the 'Barnes' approach, fiberglass brushes are crazy expensive wheeeew! My trial fire was on a Falcon head.Jim,
I am sure you know all this but - just in case - make sure that your silver is as clean as possible prior to first layer of enamel. My routine is quick dip in pickle followed by neutralizer (baking soda solution), then running water rinse and either fiberglass brush under running water or fine brass brush with dishwasher soap solution (pretty much Phil Barnes's treatment) and rinse, wipe with lint free cloth or top of the kiln for few minutes. The silver is gleaming and shiny, I found that if it is white-ish and matte - colours will not be as nice as they can be and react more.
I wash the enamels a lot, it can make very big difference with transparents. I have had good luck and very little silver reaction from the following Ninomiyas violets and purples: N73, N74, N76, N77 and L90. That's with no flux undercoating. I wash all these very well and watch my firing times and much rather underfine and place it back in the kiln..
Good luck.
Farmer57 ,Thank you for the tips! I am very greatful,I will ck out WA Ball.You're welcome. Exactly, the "silver salts" can react with certain enamel colours (it depends which metal oxides or salts are used to give enamel the particular colour). Generally speaking, blues and greens are the most forgiving. If fired directly on silver (no flux or other undercoat) - whites, reds, oranges, yellows and pinks are the most prone to reacting. So you want to source the least reactive colours and that involves many trials with different manufacturers but there are very few pinks and reds which are non reactive. Every enameler has slightly different procedure and same colours might not behave the same for everyone. It is hard to imagine but that is the reality of enamelling.
I've struggled to find white which will not react to silver at all - got a couple whites from WG Ball which are in development stages - one works better than the other but not always. WG Ball make and sell lead free enamel and they are nice people to deal with, they do have some nice purple/violets as well so you might even want to try some of theirs. Their sample size orders are very well priced too.
You're welcome. Exactly, the "silver salts" can react with certain enamel colours (it depends which metal oxides or salts are used to give enamel the particular colour). Generally speaking, blues and greens are the most forgiving. If fired directly on silver (no flux or other undercoat) - whites, reds, oranges, yellows and pinks are the most prone to reacting. So you want to source the least reactive colours and that involves many trials with different manufacturers but there are very few pinks and reds which are non reactive. Every enameler has slightly different procedure and same colours might not behave the same for everyone. It is hard to imagine but that is the reality of enamelling.
I've struggled to find white which will not react to silver at all - got a couple whites from WG Ball which are in development stages - one works better than the other but not always. WG Ball make and sell lead free enamel and they are nice people to deal with, they do have some nice purple/violets as well so you might even want to try some of theirs. Their sample size orders are very well priced too.