on copper and tarnishing and what you should (if anything) do about it.
Here's my little bits of input on the ages old issue of tarnishing  copper and green skin, since they really do seem to go together for most  of the population.
 
I like the theory about the metal being a living thing, the ever changing colors showing it's character. Let it live!
 
Lemon juice with a dash of salt will clean copper in very short order.  Rinse well or you will get lovely green in the cracks and crevices. The  metal will start tarnishing again immediately. Try a little wax.
 
On the use of lacquer/shellac/other clear coatings - EVERYTHING wears  off eventually and dealing with the worn mess of lacquer is a royal  pain.
 
Waxes - The bracelets that I cleaned in lemon/salt and then used Turtle  Wax car wax, 6 months or so ago, that have been sitting on my table  awaiting sale, are still fairly decent looking. They spend Sat/Sun on  display, then go into a plastic bag until next weekend. The Turtle Wax  wears off quickly when I wear the jewelry, so it's only a display fix,  not a wear-it fix. Apply according to directions on the can - wipe on,  wait to dry, wipe off. Pay attention to cracks and crevices. Toothbrush  helped. Major pain.
 
I love the look resulting from Perma Blue Liquid Gun Blue, [active ingredient - selenium dioxide, poison if  you drink it, keep away from children. Otherwise, not harmful to use.  Not much odor. Will NOT blue stainless steel, aluminum or non-ferrous  metals] ((More complete directions below))
 
I tried Future Floor Finish on some bracelets. The jewelry got  sticky/tacky during wear. Totally unacceptable to me. Lots of drips  after dipping, royal pain! Same with any liquid, lacquer or otherwise.  Watch out for drips and thick spots. Ugly.
 
The lacquer used on brass band instruments is also used in the  jewelry industry, if you must go the lacquer route. Caution, it also  wears off, albeit slower, then there are spots darkening and possible  peeling. Watch out for ugly drips as it dries. Ewww yuk nasty to undo... I haven't tried lacquer...
 
Suggestions from various forums around the net.
 
Spray lacquer like Krystal Klear or Rustoleum.
 
Bullseye Clear shellac - spray can.
 
Renaissance Wax or other micro-crystaline wax.
 
Butcher's Bowling Alley Wax. 1 lb. cans for about $ 10. used on bronze work, especially sculpture.
 
Johnson paste wax - several coats.
 
An elder jeweler shared an old method - Heat the copper to cherry red  and quench in oil. She said it brings out all sorts of lovely colors and  it's permanent. Forgot to ask what kind of oil....
 
For verdigris colors - According to a copper verdigris artist, ammonia  works OK, but you get the best colors from the cat box, or put the piece  in a jar with sawdust wet down with ammonia for a week or two.
 
Back to my thoughts.
 
 
I turn green when sweaty. It wipes off. I don't turn green in air  conditioning or in the winter. I know people who never turn green, ever.  Personal body chemistry, think of it as a warning signal - fix your PH  balance, you'll stop turning green.
 
From all my note collecting, tarnish and green skin is inevitable  unless you are really faithful with your health and diet, and/or  maintaining and reapplying some sort of lacquer finish, doesn't really  seem to matter much which kind, they all wear off eventually.
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Details on using Perma Blue written April 02, 2008 and added to this blog entry on Feb 26, 2009  I love the effects of gun blue on copper! I use Perma Blue, found in  the US where ever gun supplies are sold, so check Walmart and all the  sports stores. The chemical name - Selenium Dioxide 
 I dump it in a jar, use it as is, put the lid on and keep it in the  cupboard until next use, alongside my jar of lemon juice/salt for  cleaning copper. Not too strong a smell, no need for ventilation or  gloves, poison if you drink it but otherwise safe for normal grown-ups.  Read the label and don't be stupid. yada blah blah disclaimer *grin* 
 Step by step -
 **First drop the jewelry into lemon juice with a dash of salt to clean  off skin oils etc. About a minute, keep watch, I never time anything. No  specific amount of salt, maybe 1/2 tsp to one plastic lemon (found in  the produce area next to real lemons, easy to use, not costly, use any  real lemon juice you prefer). Salt is not mandatory, but it seems to  work faster. The cleaning step can also be done with ketchup, vinegar,  salsa anything acidic, I like the smell of lemons. 
 **Rinse Well, and pat dry so you don't dilute the gun blue. 
 **Drop the piece in the gun blue and keep watch. In under 5 minutes the  piece will be black. You can pull it out at any point in between for  less darkening. You can re-dip if it's not dark enough. You can paint it  on spots if you feel you can't dunk it or want spots, but painting  works Very Slow, with repeated paintings. 
 **Rinse Well!!! and rub with a soft cloth, an old t-shirt is perfect.  Very Messy if you go to black, beware for nice clothes. Rub until all  the mess is gone and you get the highlights you want. 
 The process of wiping is usually enough to get the highlights showing.  The rest I let happen naturally. The dark in the crevices lasts forever. 
 I tried tumbling a big batch one time, first with dry rice, thinking  I'd get some friction, then with stainless shot and Dawn, neither was  particularly successful, the rice not at all. But the soft cloth made  pretty quick work of it after all. 
 **Finish up with a Sunshine cloth for beautiful shine. Not required, but oh so pretty! 
 Forever after, the jewelry just needs a quick rub with a soft cloth to be ready to wear. 
 Never ever never walk away from either jar in progress. If the phone  rings, pull them out and drop them in the water until you can come back  and finish. I left one piece 4 or 5 minutes and it got Very powdery  black and took much longer to clean. I haven't experimented with longer,  but it would be messy at least, don't know if the metal would be  damaged. 
 If you use containers with lids, you can just put the lids on and store  in the cabinet. No need to refrigerate the lemon, well. Both last for  years, even if they look disgusting, (the plastic lemon type will last  years, it has preservatives, don't know about fresh lemon juice). 
 I found the middle size canning jar (wide mouth, pint size?) at Walmart  in the kitchen section, not grocery section, works really well, deep  enough to cover a bracelet, wide mouth for inserting pieces. The jars  hold two bottles of Perma Blue or two plastic lemons very nicely, so the  liquid is deep enough to cover the project while it sits. 
 To date, I've done all kinds of quartz family stones, turquoise,  malachite chips and glass. The malachite chips got a little powdery  looking and maybe a bit dark, but they were small chips so it was hard  to tell. A toothbrush and sunshine cloth restored most of their shine,  so use discretion. One cab I would have sworn was white quartz lost all  shine and absorbed a whole lot of the blue color. Totally trashed. I  have no clue what the rock really is. I tried a couple of small fresh  water pearls, and they came out fine. When in doubt, try a sample bead  before dunking the whole project. You can also paint the blue in certain  areas to spare the delicate rock, but it's a PITB and Very Slow to turn  dark.
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Toodles!
 ~S~ 
http://sherrysjewels.blogspot.com/ 
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