Quote:
Originally Posted by dancraig
Does anyone have any ideas for restoring yellowed natural ivory scales to a cleaner/brighter condition? Lemon juice has helped, but scales are still dingy looking. Thanks for reply.
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If they have got a sort of translucent yellowed look throughout the scale material, then it is going to be arduous - if not impossible - to remove it. The reason for surface yellowing is oxidisation, suinlight, polishing - if only surface deep you can remove it, but to work on the scales properly you will have to (probably) unpin them, sand the surface down to clean material, then work up in grits and buff to a finished lustre. Tripoli is good.
If the yellowing has been caused by (a) oil seepage from enthusiastically over oiling the pivot, (b) rust from being in close contact with a rusted blade, or (c) use of an oil to "shine" the scales up you will not have much joy as it will be uniformly distributed in the thickness of the scales.
Some people advocate the use of serious chemicals - bleaches, etc, that will make the surface look whiter. They also bite into the surface, producing a slight "wooliness" that you have to get rid off with sandpaper, steel wool, etc. However, the disappointing thing is that as the scales regain their former polished glory, the stain becomes apparant again.
If it isn't that bad I would try to live with it. If un-pinning and sanding does not cure it, nothing will - with the possible exception of a long lie in a solvent bath.
Regards,
Neil
One other thing - if they aren't too badly stained, toothpaste will do more than just lemon juice.