Help with methods for cleaning corrosion from old Sheffield plate

Discussion in 'Silver' started by KylieS, Jun 2, 2023.

  1. KylieS

    KylieS Well-Known Member

    Hello all! I found this rather worse-for-wear chafing dish in the local Emmaus (thrift) in France and bought her home to live with me. It's missing the insert, and I didn't think it was very old - can't find a maker (yet) but the mark shows it to be pre 1860 and made in Metal Plaque, the French version of old Sheffield plate. My problem is that it has a lot of corrosion at the inner rims - very rough and bubbly, though the structure is still intact - and I don't know how to clean it off. Thought I should try to get some cleaning tips and advice from the experts about the best way to proceed with a little light restoration :angelic::joyful:

    Thank you for any advice you can give!

    20230602_152846[1].jpg 20230602_152834[1].jpg 20230602_152807[1].jpg 20230602_152756[1].jpg 20230602_152933[1].jpg
     
  2. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Can you get some white vinegar, the inexpensive sort? Vinegar eats corrosion and ought not discolor or damage the part you want to save. Here in the USA I'd use ketchup, but I doubt any self-respecting French market would have the stuff on its shelves! (can't blame 'em) Put the vinegar in a plastic pan or basin of some sort, and put the pan inside a garbage bag so it evaporates less and you don't have to smell it. Put the corroded silver into the pan and leave it alone for a while The vinegar will turn green and the green will leave your poor silverplated piece.

    Or something like that. I normally work on jewelry, which is a lot smaller.
     
  3. KylieS

    KylieS Well-Known Member

    Thank you @evelyb30 ! We're going to need a LOT of vinegar ... :hilarious: Though I suppose I can always just treat the top rims this way if I can find a big enough tray. (We can get ketchup here too btw!) Thanks again!
     
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  4. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    The ketchup has the advantage of sitting on the green, so you use a lot less. Just glob on and let sit. It also doesn't pong nearly as much. The acid is what does the work, but it can stain brass if left alone.
     
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  5. bercrystal

    bercrystal Well-Known Member

    Please post some post-ketchup treatment photos. I would like to see the results. :happy:
     
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  6. wlwhittier

    wlwhittier Well-Known Member

    Try a cat-litter tray...
     
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  7. KylieS

    KylieS Well-Known Member

    Yes, will do! I might make a reel of that see how it comes out...never done that sort of thing before! I might try a half amd half with vinegar vs ketchup if I can make that work. I'm interested to see how it comes up!
     
  8. Bev aka thelmasstuff

    Bev aka thelmasstuff Colored pencil artist extraordinaire ;)

    I've used ketchup on jewelry. Never thought to use it on silverplate. Off to try it now!
     
  9. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Not sure I'd use to to polish things, but as greenie remover it works nicely.
     
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  10. KylieS

    KylieS Well-Known Member

    Hi all, just an update that I've tried one round with the ketchup - definitely an improvement but needs a bit more treatment.

    Before pic:

    20230602_152756.jpg
    And after...

    16877224829295174906446623100278.jpg


    So I'm going to try vinegar soon...slow progress here as per ;)
     
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