MATERIALS AND TOOLS
🧪 Consumables
Basic (safe)
- **Bar soap (laundry soap)** — your base, creates an alkaline environment
- **Distilled water** — the main solvent
- **Baking soda (boiled)** — a mild abrasive and acid neutralizer
- **Kefir (2.5%)** — gentle cleaning for silver
- **Vinegar** — a cheap alternative (less effective)
Specialized
- **Citric acid** — for oxides, use with caution around patina
- **Ammonia** — for silver, opens up pitting/cavities
- **Thiourea** — dissolves black silver patina (silver sulfide)
- **Phosphoric acid** — for copper, doesn't affect silver
- **Asidol (rust converter)** — for aluminum bronze
- **Pemoluxe (abrasive cleaner)** — abrasive cleaning agent
- **Azelit (rust remover)** — for cast iron and iron (just 1 minute!)
- **BTA (benzotriazole)** — preservation after cleaning
- **Sulfur ointment** — for adding patina
🛠️ Mechanical cleaning tools
1. Fiberglass brushes (Must Have!)
Soft — won't scratch the metal.
- **Fraying the tip:** heat with a lighter, press against the wall of a jar, and twist
- Use **with soap and water** — never dry!
- **Pro tip:** an optical cable from telecom techs works great — the core is 3–4 mm
2. Scalers (scrapers)
For removing thick layers of oxides — only on "trashed" coins and iron items.
- Work **wet only**
- Don't use on silver — it scratches!
3. Ultrasonic cleaner
- **Optimal:** 4.5–6 L, 180 W+, 40 kHz
- Distilled water, coins of the same metal only
- Time: 15 min — 1 hour
4. Toothpicks and bone/wood picks
For removing dirt from recesses. A wooden pick or bottle cap edge — minimal chemical use.