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Rare Victorian Forum > Antiques > Antique Furniture Care > Cleaning Brass?
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Author Topic: Cleaning Brass?  (Read 1220 times)
zeke
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Cleaning Brass?
« on: January 04, 2009, 09:06:04 PM »

I found a nice old pair of Aesthetic movement andirons at a garage sale today (cheap!)

http://i83.photobucket.com/albums/j285/zekenstein/IMG_1749.jpg

They are tarnished and have some paint splatters on them. The brass part is solid brass as a magnet doesn't stick and the dings on them from banging together show brass. Any suggestions on cleaning them without wrecking them. Any advice would be appreciated. I have used brasso and 0000 steel woll on brass in the past but I really like these and do not want to compromise them by being overzealous. If you remove the nut on the bottom the brass parts separate into 5 easy to work with pieces.
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Raymanretro
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Re: Cleaning Brass?
« Reply #1 on: January 11, 2009, 12:29:37 PM »

Zeke, those are very nice! I`m one of those that like to polish a lot and have a bench buffer with the cotton wheels and different compounds. I like the Mothers and Wenol to polish by hand. But These andiorns havwe a very nice patina from the pic and I would be tempted to clean the paint off with denatured alchol and leave them as is. A spray clear coat wouldnt look bad either. Great find ! Cool
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Michadi Antiques
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Re: Cleaning Brass?
« Reply #2 on: February 26, 2009, 07:41:38 PM »

Zeke,

If you are planning of keeping them for some time go ahead a polish them and don't worry about it.  What ever patina you remove in your polishing effort will return in about 5 years anyway.  Brass gains a patina much more rapidly than your finished wooden furniture.  You should begin to see a difference within a single year.  If you wish to speed up the process, there are chemicals that can give you an instant patina in a wide variety of shades.

Michael
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zeke
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Re: Cleaning Brass?
« Reply #3 on: March 01, 2009, 12:09:36 PM »

Hey Michael,

Good advice and that's exactly what i did. It was impossible to remove the paint and crud without removing the patina so I took them apart and soaked them in ammonia. A little 0000 steel wool and voila! I'm sure that over time they will tarnish again and regain that nice color.

http://i83.photobucket.com/albums/j285/zekenstein/IMG_1820.jpg

Thanks Michael
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