Getting rid of yellowing?

PGowdy

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No. If someone had a dirty yellow stormtrooper for sale for £3, i wouldn't buy it. (not even for £2) Often they can't be fixed with peroxide so i wouldn't even bother with it. However, if someone was selling a nice white one and stated "i have given this a bit of a bleach hence the low price" for £4, i would buy it in a second. No problem.

As i stated above- I agree that people shouldn't be selling them without disclosing that they have bleached them but if the price reflects that then i don't personally have a problem.
 

shawn_k

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PGowdy said:
I agree one should disclose that they have bleached a figure before selling. 100%. I also don't think it would bother most buyers. I'd pay a lot more for a bleached Stormtrooper than a heavily yellowed fit for the bin Stormtrooper. Time, it seems, has already damaged a yellowed figure so i pretty much don't care what happens to it in 10 years because of bleaching. I personally can't see it doing much more harm, and there certainly isn't any proof of it, than time itself. Just my opinion tho.


How about this then. Let's say the bleaching deteriorates the plastic even faster and your white stormtrooper becomes crumbs after a decade. You'd honestly pay more that even though the risk is there? I know that is on the extreme side, but we honestly don't know. At least with a yellow figure you know it hasn't been altered and will only deteriorate at the normal rate. In reality is it really getting that difficult to find a white stormtrooper? I honestly haven't looked in a while.
 

PGowdy

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I'm happy to risk £4-5 on that scenario not happening, yes. Without any proof or evidence that this could happen i'd not worry myself assuming that it will or even could happen.
You could say the same about ROTJ bubbles "I believe that in 10 years most of them would have turned dust" Ok, sure. They might. And er, they might not.
 

Imperial nut

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i just noticed the activity on here and there are some good points raised here. I know i am not the only person on here or on any of the many SW forums who have tried this, some have posted results and others have gone into complex descripitions of how to do this.
Either way i was curious and tried it on a few stormies and left it at that. It would be nice to have beautiful white stormies but i cant afford them, so i collect beaters and it will stay like that as i dont think you can put an army together without some beaters.

the main reason as mentioned above i dont know what will happen to the figures later down the road so my tests only involved 6 of my worst offenders. and as i am nearing 150 stormies yellowing is something i have a lot of. :D

Joe - no offence taken on your point, i tried to be as vauge with my measurements and ingredients but the info is out there, (and if folks want me to delete the posts, as they have been read) i really didnt want the scammers to do this either.
Especially as i am on the hunt for stormies a lot :roll: after my reservations about bleaching any more troopers i personally wouldnt buy bleached ones at all.Even if the buyer was open and honest(which wont happen on ebay)


but as for the whole dirt versus plastic degredation , i just put forward an alternate theory based on some research but it was just me trying to figure out how this happens.

Anyway feel free to get the mods to remove the thread or i will delete the posts. As you never know who is on here and although we cant stop someone from getting the info we could make it harder???
 

Joe

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Appreciate your concern with wanting it to be deleted Steve but as you said it's on the net on loads of forums so people will find the info if they want, I never set out to directly attack you (and I am still not! lol) it's just that this was the only active thread going so here is where it happened lol.

My beef really is with people that I am sure are against any other kind of touch ups or repaints/reseals etc yet are nonchalantly saying "Oh yeah wow look at those lovely white figures off I go to get some chemicals! Great idea!" etc etc without thinking about the repercussions. It's just the same when people bang on about reproduction sellers then go buy some repro DT sabers..boggles my mind.

I think it says it all if you yourself wouldn't buy chemically altered stormies. I don't think there is much more to say really after that!

Let's just hope this hasn't already become commonplace in the hobby (although anything is possible lately) and we don't see these appearing on ebay, disclosed or undisclosed - all bad news when resold.

Long live the yellowed stinky stormies, for they are the real deal :mrgreen:
 

Imperial nut

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Yeah Joe , I wouldn't buy whitened stormies as , with everyone, no one knows what will happen to the treated ones years from now.

But the main reason is I wouldn't want to encourage anyone , but then again no one can tell if a unscrupulous seller puts em up .

Either way my whitening was a curious experiment and my chemi-stormies are marked with a black sole( black soul :lol: )

And they will never be sold no matter what.

And Joe love the trilogo site I have read every bit and it's great .
I can see where your passion for preservation comes from .
 

Groovephil

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Just done the hydo perox (9%) method on some utterly battered stormtroopers, the results are astonishing. Surely someone has created a product you can buy in model shops by now? The stuff I purchased was 75p a bottle.

These will now be bagged and tagged as my reference to see how the years affect them compared to the natural ones. Always good to have a reference marker.
 

tigerham

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Good idea with the referecing Phil, be interesting to know what happens in years to come. Maybe they'll still be A ok... maybe they'll be left as a pile of plastic mush intergrated into the display cabinet, lol! ;)
 

Frunkstar

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As I have been away from the hobby for a while this is the first such thread I have read & I have found it rather an eye opener in terms of more things to watch out for when buying 2nd hand figures :?

I am undecided as to weather this is a good or bad thing for beater figure in the long run but as a quick fix for some that only want "average" figures for a diorama or say army building I can indeed see the point, not like its for the best of the best that would be on display with you main collection, one major concern I do have which from what I can see of the thread so far has not been talked about is the possible interaction/chemical reaction that "may/could" become an issue from the process - other figures & other plastics have know to react to one another from factory made vintage original figures, what's not to say that the alteration of these figures from yellowed to white state via chemical means may not indeed have a knock on effect to other figures they are stored wit??, I am admittedly no chemist, but the point is worth consideration.

The thing that interests me with this post/process, which has also from what I can tell not been discussed, that being would this process be a solution for figures with the dreaded mould/mould spotting??, if so the process would have a whole new direction in which to be regarded as a good thing for the future of the figures & the hobby in general, I have never had a figure with mould spotting just the usual mould (frosting effect) which can be reversed with some UV/sunlight exposure, but I do not think the same is possible with the spotting fungus type issue, I ask as I have just had my first figure turn up for my collection that is affected by this condition, the figure has been isolated from the rest & I would like to experiment with the process to see if it would rectify the problem - Thoughts? - anyone else tried it?.

I for think that without experimentation in to restoration on SW collectables that the distant future of the hobby may be fraught with problems in terms of mould/degradation/fading & fungal issues, so why not get the ball rolling now - why wait till the problems are right on your doorstep & panic sets in?, I can see both sides for sure but if we only have the odd beater to loose I say go for it, as we all have a few bin fodder beaters!.
 

Joe

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Frunkstar said:
Someone must have thought about this one?

I have often thought "when will people stop talking about getting rid of yellowing" if that's of any use Frank :lol:
 

Frunkstar

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My question is not directed at the Yellowing issue if you have a look at my post Joe, but thanks for the reply m8, at least I know there are others on the forum that can actually still see this thread :lol:

images2.jpg
 

Joe

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I didn't read it to be honest Frank just saw you looking for replies :lol: :lol:
 

tigerham

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Frank I only know about bleaching figures to get them back to whites and that only goes for white n vblack figures i.e. stormies n scouts! Sorry dude.
 

Imperial nut

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i have the luke farmboy i got as a kid and it is mottled to bits but as he has huge sentimental value i wont be bleaching him, in fact i am well over my bleaching experiment.
but 6 months on the bleached troopers are fine and only disguishable by their marked feet.

its simply the question between conservation and restoration as far as the ethic are concerned.
by the time we are 70+ and looking at starwars on the antiuqes roadshow everyweek, will restoration be a big part of our hobby,, probably not ,,but it may be bigger than it is now.
Is that a good thing i dont think so.

But why then do they meticously clean da vinchi's and carravaggios works?? isnt the dirt built up part of their history?
they jury is out for me ,, i definately dont agree with reseals and repros,, but loose beaters are slightly different.
Either way my curiosoty has been slated and my yellow stormies still stand beside the whiteys and bleacheys.
:D
 
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I just bin any yellow stuff i mean it looks so bad i look after my stuff . same with beaters old rubbish i just stay away from i mean whats the point in buying some old rubbish and then spending weeks months years trawling ebay getting bit parts id rather wait and get a mint boxed copy than collect loose stuff .
 

theslider

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Princess Leia Organa said:
I just bin any yellow stuff i mean it looks so bad i look after my stuff . same with beaters old rubbish i just stay away from i mean whats the point in buying some old rubbish and then spending weeks months years trawling ebay getting bit parts id rather wait and get a mint boxed copy than collect loose stuff .

Isn't that part of the thrill of collecting though? Especially if you get something cheap?
 
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