how to clean gold jewellery
Restore the glowing brilliance to your gold jewellery.
At its best gold has a brilliant yellow shine, however it can become dull due to daily use or when stored for a long period of time. Pure gold is too soft to be used for jewellery, so other metals are added to create an alloy, and the result is jewellery that may tarnish depending upon the ratio of metals used.
Town Talk’s gold jewellery care products are specially formulated to bring back the sparkle to your gold jewellery. Scroll down for information on solid gold jewellery, how to clean gold vermeil jewellery, and also how to care for your gold plated jewellery items.
HOW TO CLEAN SOLID GOLD JEWELLERY
For bringing back a deep shine to your gold jewellery try a Town Talk Gold Polishing Cloth. This will polish your jewellery to a glowing brilliance, leaving it looking like new again in no time!
For gold jewellery with hard gemstones, you need our renowned Jewel Sparkle which is especially designed for cleaning all your gold earrings, rings, necklaces and bracelets etc. It gently dissolves surface grime on the stones and the metal mounts, which will make the gemstones shine much more brightly! Also try our handy Jewellery Cleaning Wand.
When using the Jewel Sparkle dip, do not fully submerge gold watches, or jewellery with emeralds, coral, amber, opals, or any stones that have water-soluble fixings (hard gemstones such as diamonds, rubies and sapphires are fine). Instead, use our Delicate Jewellery Cleaner on the stones and a Gold Polishing Cloth to buff up the gold.
how to clean gold vermeil jewellery
Vermeil is sterling silver covered with a layer of gold which must be at least 2.5 microns thick.
To keep your vermeil jewellery looking at its best, follow the same steps listed above for solid gold jewellery.
how to clean gold plated jewellery
Gold-plated jewellery uses a cheaper base metal such as steel or brass with a thinner coating of gold metal on top. Depending on the manufacturer, the thickness of the gold plate varies. Due to the soft nature of gold you can be at risk of wearing the gold plating away, especially on items with a very thin layer of plating. Therefore our recommendation is to handle gold plated items carefully, and clean them using Town Talk’s Jewel Sparkle with a soft microfibre cloth. This will safely remove all the surface dust, pollution, oils etc that might dull or even damage the surface, and restore the shine to your jewellery.
HOW TO CLEAN WHITE GOLD JEWELLERY
White gold jewellery is produced when the yellow gold is alloyed with another silver coloured metal to give it a whiter appearance; this can be nickel, silver, copper, zinc - it can vary. The base alloy is whiter in colour and harder but can have a yellow tint depending on the original content of the yellow gold and what its alloyed with. As a generalisation, the whiter the base ring, the lower the gold content.
With some white gold alloys the jewellery item is then plated to give it a bright white appearance, usually rhodium plating is used (platinum & palladium plating is also possible). The thickness of the plated layer and its adhesion to the base metal / alloy can vary dramatically dependant on price and quality of the item.
If the item is not rhodium plated then a very light polishing with a gold cloth is possible (we would always recommend testing in a small inconspicuous area first).
We would not recommend gold cloth for any rhodium plated item. Use Jewel Sparkle or Delicate Jewellery Cleaner for deeper cleaning, and a microfibre cloth to polish and remove fingerprints from rhodium plated white gold items.
