Oxidation on ancient silver

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by stainless, Aug 27, 2011.

  1. stainless

    stainless ANTONINIVS

    I should already know this, but - If I were to have a denarius with oxidation, then were to soak the coin in lemon juice for a few days (which is what I was advised to do), what would the silver underneath the oxidation look like? would it be fine, or would it be something like a sestertius after being cured from BD?

    And from the previous threads, I'm nearly sure oxidation will not spread, but could someone correct my memory?


    thanks
    stainless
     
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  3. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

    I've had some luck with lemon juice but suggest not leaving it unattended for anything approaching 'a few days'. Sometimes a few minutes helps and it is much easier to do more than to reverse. Sometimes a little rubbing between the fingers (abrasive skin) helps and really good rinsing is a really great idea. I would be interested in seeing before and after photos. The 'never clean' people are right about half the time since I prefer 'toned' to 'bright' but I assume you are seeing something ('oxidation') worth removing?
     
  4. stainless

    stainless ANTONINIVS

    It's a great looking coin, and I haven't bought it yet, but I am considering it. I mean, the portrait on the piece is so amazing that I don't even notice the oxidation (which is on the fields) at first glance, but after I like at the rest of the coin I can see it may need some work.

    stainless
     
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