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Post by TheRock on Nov 7, 2019 2:39:54 GMT -5
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Post by fernwood on Nov 7, 2019 4:25:27 GMT -5
Were these dry polished? Look good.
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Post by Drummond Island Rocks on Nov 7, 2019 9:51:59 GMT -5
Those look great. If they were dry polished (corn cob) you done good.
Chuck
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Post by TheRock on Nov 7, 2019 12:52:53 GMT -5
Thanks, No they were done on the King Cab machine. The only one that was a lil disappointing was the long one to the right of the dime. It has something going on in the stone but istill looks good. The Camera as you know shows everything. The Dry method is not bad as I have said before but the Cab Machine is the way to go. takes about 10 minutes or less to do each one.
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Post by Drummond Island Rocks on Nov 7, 2019 12:58:31 GMT -5
I tend to use the specimens section for my Petoskey stones that I do on the wheels. Not really a cab and not a tumbled stone so I go with polished specimen for lack of a better place. Great looking stones though. I give you credit for doing ones that small on the wheels. I usually only put that effort into larger ones.
Chuck
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Post by rockjunquie on Nov 7, 2019 17:21:19 GMT -5
They're so cute.
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Post by TheRock on Nov 7, 2019 21:08:13 GMT -5
Thanks, MaryJane has a show this weekend and a couple are sold already that will be made into necklaces. She says a Couple of those will go for $35 to $40 bucks while the lesser ones $25 to $30 so not bad for the small amount of time it takes to polish and to glue on a hasp and a basic chain.
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