lol in truth it was a bit of an accident at first because I was giving them away as presents to family members anyway but it turned out to be a good idea in the end to test my products so it's something to bear in mind if anyone else is thinking of making stuff themselves to sell to the public.
Beautiful jewelry! Does it matter what type of silver? I only buy sterling silver (when I get silver), and I don't bathe with it - my jewelry is last on and first off when coming or going. Just curious, though, about sterling?? (P.S. Very first piece seen here - where would I vote for you? In initial (by 12 hours ago) or elsewhere?)
So from what I know, the only real difference between sterling silver and fine silver is the purity, they mix metals in to give it strength, so in theory, if you have different metals mixed in with your silver they could react differently to cleaning chemicals and so on even more so than here, it just depends on what the silver refiners have done to the metal.
That could all be down to chance though whether it affects it or not too, so really I would just recommend prevention to be on the safe side. The idea is you simply don't want any weird chemicals coming into contact with the silver otherwise it either oxidises as I showed in the first photograph or does something even worse.
People forget that what they're buying is a genuine silver so the last thing you want is to dip it in something weird and then have it shrink or react oddly to what you're doing. One thing I would say though with fine silver in particular is it is a lot softer and I mean really soft compared to sterling and you could easily just end up crushing or squashing it if you're not careful.
lol in truth it was a bit of an accident at first because I was giving them away as presents to family members anyway but it turned out to be a good idea in the end to test my products so it's something to bear in mind if anyone else is thinking of making stuff themselves to sell to the public.
Beautiful jewelry! Does it matter what type of silver? I only buy sterling silver (when I get silver), and I don't bathe with it - my jewelry is last on and first off when coming or going. Just curious, though, about sterling?? (P.S. Very first piece seen here - where would I vote for you? In initial (by 12 hours ago) or elsewhere?)
So from what I know, the only real difference between sterling silver and fine silver is the purity, they mix metals in to give it strength, so in theory, if you have different metals mixed in with your silver they could react differently to cleaning chemicals and so on even more so than here, it just depends on what the silver refiners have done to the metal.
That could all be down to chance though whether it affects it or not too, so really I would just recommend prevention to be on the safe side. The idea is you simply don't want any weird chemicals coming into contact with the silver otherwise it either oxidises as I showed in the first photograph or does something even worse.
People forget that what they're buying is a genuine silver so the last thing you want is to dip it in something weird and then have it shrink or react oddly to what you're doing. One thing I would say though with fine silver in particular is it is a lot softer and I mean really soft compared to sterling and you could easily just end up crushing or squashing it if you're not careful.