Quote:
Originally Posted by ithacaartist
Olle and Alvin, the great news is that all these colors can be accomplished in your toaster oven! The difficult part is setting the dial for the correct temp to get the desired color, but once established , after a bit of experimentation, mark the dial and you can reproduce any time. A pan of clean sand that's deep enough to immerse the part is left in for a good long time to stabilize its temp. After pre-heating the sand, snuggle the polished, degreased part down in and leave in the oven for a good long time so the part is thoroughly heated through to that temp.
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I do it in the oven now and then (when wifey is away...), but I just put the parts on a piece of aluminum foil. Sometimes I suspend them from makeshift wire hangers. This allows me to see the parts and abort when they have the right color.
IMO, the most difficult part of it is to get a nice, even polish, and to get the parts clean enough to take on an even color. Do you get a uniform color when you use sand, or can you see small marks where the sand has been touching the steel?