Daily Wire Jewelry Making Tip
December 29, 2009

Question:

I have read so often about tumbling my jewelry projects in a tumble polisher to get a final shine on them. I got a tumbler for Christmas, and am wondering what medium I can use. I hear so much about steel shot, but some of my stones are soft like Turquoise, and I am afraid to use steel shot. I have seen media from ground corn cobs and walnut hulls all the way to big rock like chunks, and of course, steel shot. Which can I use, and which is most effective?

Answer:

Regarding tumbling wire jewelry pieces that contain soft and/or porous materials like turquoise, malachite, fluorite, amber, azurite, rhodocrosite, and pearls, some folks do it all the time with mixed results, and others say not to tumble jewelry made with them at all! I can tell you that when we tumble rocks, the entire rock batch per tumbler load is of the same hardness. For example we tumble malachite and turquoise together, and agates, jaspers and quartz is another combo, etc. (In the Resource Center, our new Gemstone Glossary has hardness listed under each mineral

Wire-Sculpture has a great new article about tumbling here: http://wire-sculpture.com/jewelry-making-blog/1384/tumbling-your-jewelry/

Answer contributed by Dale “Cougar” Armstrong

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