Do you know of a product that can restore shine to powder-coated enamel cookware?
Guys, I fucked up. I have what was a beautiful two-tone colander that looked nice and retro, with a shiny red finish. After some use, there was a very tiny amount of rust showing in places around the rim, and my dumbass self decided to soak it in CLR like I do with anything metal that gets signs of rust. It didn’t occur to me that it would remove the gloss finish from the powder-coated enamel.
Now it looks and feels awful, like it has a dull, pink, rubbery coating instead of the beautiful glossy bright red finish of yore.
Is there a product I can use to polish it back to beauty? It wasn’t cheap and has been discontinued, so I’d like to restore it if possible.
I’ve searched online but my Google-fu isn’t worthy, apparently. Thanks in advance!
That’s a great idea, thanks! If it works, I can send it through the dishwasher a dozen times and it should be fine, right? It’s the outer coating and I don’t plan to lick it much.
because possibly a thermal coating was removed and there is paint underneath which is coming off or reacting to things that are coming into contact with it
Google around for restoration services, I'm in south America so I'm no use to you but my sister had a couple of grandma's pots restored. They basically sand blast them and re powder coat them
Good luck on your journey. I don't have anything contructive to say to help, but this is certainly a way in which I would fuck up and I hope you find an answer.
I don't know about the best route or if there's a viable one to get it to its original state, but if you want a replacement, I think that this is what you have:
EDIT2: I see the two-tone being sold on EBay ("lloyd reston collander") new, albeit not currently in pink, if that's the color you have.
EDIT3: Apparently Lloyd Reston is the "exclusive distributor", and "Calypso" is the brand.
If you have magenta -- I'm not sure from the picture you have, looks kind of salmon, in between their pink and magenta collander, but could be lighting -- this is their current one-tone model:
EDIT4: bonanza.com has two-toned ones, but not in pink or magenta, just orange, black, or lime. And they're significantly-more than the one-toned ones, at $37.
EDIT5: Well, I don't see it on Google Shopping, which is usually kind of the authoritative source, because they index pretty much everything. That being said, it does look like this sold through major retailers, including Wal-Mart, which is everywhere, so I would bet that there are a bunch out there floating around in private hands. Even if you can't restore your existing one, you might keep an eye on used markets like eBay, Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, stuff like that, wait for one to pop up.
Yes, I think that’s the one. It was more expensive when I bought it, and they’ve since discontinued it, which is likely why it’s out of stock.
I do like the white interior, since it more closely matches the one my gran left to me that was rusted beyond use.
$30 is kind of a lot for my budget, and I prefer to repair things rather than replace, because consumption bad. That’s a good metric for effort and materials, tho, so thanks!
edit to your edit: I have the bright cherry red one, which doesn’t seem to be available on eBay. It looks pink or salmon because I ruined the outer coating, but it was a glossy cherry red like in your first link before I adulterated it.
I second this, if it's really a hard a material. From the word enamel I assumed a sort of ceramic coating, but the word 'rubbery' gives me a little hesitation.
Anyway, a hard coating could be polished back to a shine with 3M polishing paper. The product I'm thinking of comes in a pack with 6 sheets, each a different grit, and they get fine enough that you could restore scratched and cloudy glass to clear.
The product description said ‘powder-coated enameled finish’, and I had thought ‘enameled’ may have referred to the outer layer I destroyed. So now I’m just dealing with the powder coating.
I think I’ll try your recommendation first – it’s the most food-safe and makes the most sense to me. Kinda worried I’ve irreparably ruined it without re-coating and re-firing it. I hope that’s not the case, and the ‘enameled’ part referred to the white inner bit which didn’t dull in the soak.
e: maybe someone who knows more about these terms than me will chime in? I know a little about them because my grandmother taught ceramics and my father is in aviation where they do powder coatings, but not enough, obviously.
Carnauba wax is food-safe, but non-abrasive, so it won't smooth the now-etched matte surface, and it's fairly soft, so not very durable. Many car waxes are based on it.