After an enameled piece has been stoned and fired for the last time, it is often desirable to give the enamel a gloss or polish additional to that which it naturally receives from the firing. Fig. 7. Carborundum or Emery Stone. If the metal used is other than fine gold or fine silver it will be black or oxidized when taken from the furnace, in which case it should be “pickled,” that is, submerged for a minute or two, until the oxidization is removed and the metal becomes bright, in a mild “pickle” consisting of a warm solution of one part sulphuric acid and one Polishing is best done on a lathe with a swiftly revolving wheel, say about 2200 revolutions per minute. A wheel of from three to six inches in diameter, made of hard felt or wood, is very satisfactory. If the felt is thin it is often necessary to make a wooden back for it in order to keep it flat. The piece to be polished should be held on a small piece of leather or felt so that the hands may not come in contact with the wheel, in which case the skin and nails would soon be worn away. Rubber finger cots will serve as an additional protection. The enamel surface to be polished should first be covered with wet pumice of about the consistency of mud. Then the pumice-covered surface should be pressed against the face of the felt or wood wheel, and as It is best to use the finest ground pumice obtainable, although on rough jobs a coarse grade may be used. Tutty powder (oxide of zinc) is said to give even a better polish than fine pumice, and is often used after a preliminary polish has been given by pumice. A different wheel should be used for each polishing compound. The polishing should be kept up until the enamel surface takes on the desired gloss. This polishing process will cut away the metal quicker than it does the enamel, so that any slight lines and scratches which the metal received in the stoning will be removed by the polishing. Care must be taken not to polish away too much of the metal, or to cut down and destroy any When the piece is polished sufficiently, it should be rinsed and brushed off in clean water, which will remove all trace of the pumice. The piece is now finished as far as the enameling process is concerned, but may, however, be plated, set with stones, engraved, etc., as may be desired. If after the piece is polished it is found that there are a number of small pit-holes in it, in which the pumice sticks even after the brushing, this may be remedied by digging the pumice out with a scraper or any |