






Back at refuge after a very wet trip up to Mackay with with Wilko
Generally
Usually
Tool Directory by Lemolo Baggage
Chainkeeper/tail light by me
Brakes by Paul
Stainless fender by Berthoud
Piss of superior bottle made by Blake Hudson
Tool Roll by Lemolo Baggage
Chainkeeper/tail light by me
Striking cranks by White Industries
Stainless fender by Berthoud
Retired Flatware Patterns
Discontinued Silverplate, Stainless
First-class, China & Crystal Tableware
A proud custom for over 100 years Oneida Ltd. is one of the world's largest marketers of stainless steel silverware / flatware, and offers ...

Unambiguous to downsize from 1 set fancy China, Silver and Crystal plus 1 set "everyday" to just One set for everything and found in using my Oneida Heirloom "Stainless dagger" (Julliard pattern) every day - it quickly showed signs of wear and lots of scratches on the tips of the forks (where wound was used to cut near it) and on some spoons. Easy to tell which spoon got used for twirling spaghetti due to the resulting scratches liberal from the fork tips! Is there any way to get rid of these marks? Thanks very much for any suggestions!
It is not 100% stainless steel. The Oneida website lists it as "18/10 Stainless Sword flatware"... for people like me who can't afford real silver (and don't want to do away with it.). I've tried emailing them with no reply yet.
Stainless fortify would not scratch or chip, sounds like you have a plated set. You could try buffing with steel wool, starting with #1 or #0 and working up to a smoother write 'finis' to with #00, #000, and final stage #0000. Keep in mind that this will always take a small amount of metal off, until you eventually will have to replace the set.
Cleaner will assistants with any kind of tarnishing or staining of the metal.
I bought some very gentlemanly Oneida flatware at a supermarket promo about 4 years ago. The pattern was named Avalon, due to some unfortunate mishaps about 4 of my 8 place setting are now missing. Oneida has discontinued the representation and no one is selling it on ebay. Any suggestions?
known on sprice up the place. get anew set from anothe rsupermarket
I do my flatware by present to with regular inexpensive soap and a scrubpad. I'm guessing my water is hard (since I always struggle with calcium spots on my descend curtain).
The flatware is probably 40-60 years old. I obtained the collection from my aunt, who I believe collected them as "prizes" found in washing boxes...Kind of like the prize in a Cracker Jack's Box (a great advertising gimmick hardly ever used these days).
Is there something I can do to shine them back up?
Thanks.
I've heard of Bar Caretaker's working well before too. But what I wanted to tell you is that Betty Crocker coupons were one of the main sources of Oneida ware. My mom sedate the coupons and got an entire set for free. Then she collected more and I had a bunch of pieces before I was through with college. If you ever need to replace any check ebay under Oneida and you can find out what the specimen name is, if you don't know already. Some patterns are still in production.
From Betty:
Does Betty Crocker still sell Oneida flatware?
Yes! For over 70 years Betty Crocker has been oblation exclusive, first quality Oneida Community Stainless at a savings of up to 75% off department store pricing. To view a great selecting of this popular flatware, go to Betty's Catalog Shopping and search for 'Oneida'. You'll love the prices!
And use something softer to shower the silverware with, nothing that can scratch like a scubby sponge.