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Martin H. Eastburn Martin H. Eastburn is offline
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Default Cleaning an Antique

Generally antiques are not messed with much at all. Dusting and
light damp cloth touching up.

We had a person on the group that polished the ugly green bronze statue
in the estate he bought... destroyed the value.

Professionals buying would rather clean anything than yourself.

Martin

Sonny wrote:
Someone recently told me a formula for cleaning antiques (the finish
in good shape, but needed good cleaning) is equal parts mineral
spirits, linsed oil, turpentine and water. Applied with steel wool and
gently rubbed onto the piece. I was not informed that this is good for
all appications, though it seemed to be implied that it was.

I've never heard of this formula and I sense this formula's chemistry
is questionable. It wouldn't be expensive or difficult to test it, but
I'm not confident this mixture will properly clean a dirty or
moderately dirty antique.

I already have good cleaning techniques, but I'm always willing to
learn a new one. This one may be better for certain applications, than
the one(s) I use.

Opinions, comments?

Sonny