• Long-Lasting Shine - The finest ingredients keep brass, bronze & copper beautiful for many years to come
  • Easy - It takes just seconds to effortlessly polish, rinse & dry for a brilliant, mirror-like shine
  • Effective - Helps bring your brass pieces back to its original beauty by erasing the discoloration
  • Protect - Anti-tarnish formula leaves behind a protective coating that delays tarnish from reforming
  • Use On - All brass mugs, pots, pans, sinks, doorknobs & other tarnished brass pieces around your home

Holy crap - this stuff is AMAZING! The second I put a small glove on, you could notice it working - without even starting to buff it! Look at the before and after. Amazing - highly reccomend!

Have used Hagerty heavy duty metal polish for years. purchased this product. I cleaned both a brass fire extinguisher and a blow torch with the Hagerty until I could no longer get any oxidation or dirt off. I then switched to the Wright and could not believe my eyes. After wiping down the two items the cloth was solid black. Unbelievable. It is o9ut of this world. I am a believer. Will order several more bottles this week.

I originally used this (most of a bottle) on a brass bucket that hadn't been polished in fifty years. It was a chore, but it got the job done. Regular but infrequent reapplications have kept the bucket looking good. A tip: Many decorative brass items are lacquered. The lacquer coat helps retard, but not totally prevent, oxidation, so eventually it will need to be restored. If your item is lacquered, you'll need to remove the lacquer with lacquer thinner before you can polish it.

I inherited a family samovar over 100 yrs old, 2 years ago. I hadn’t cleaned it , and it hadn't been for a least 10 years before it came to me. The last few months it became increasingly dark with odd marks all over it. I had just been using a clean dust rag every few weeks or so, afraid to clean it. Finally it turned very dark. The 10 Artist stamps on front, written in Russian were no longer visible. Ihave worked with artifacts in a museum, but we never use brass polish, due to integrity of item. Mainly,most things are climate controlled, and not touched. But not in my home, sadly. The closest I ever came to using Anything on an artifact was cigarette ash, but you have to find a smoker. Lol. I knew my grandparents used the heck out of samovar as inside is calcium coated. I was afraid of brass revealing worn marks. I found the Wrights polish effective, easy and safe. I tested a spot on back first. . I found the bottom stand of samovar was coated brass, so I covered it with a cloth. I would never want to use polish on coated brass. The polish was runny as reviewers have stated, but you apply polish to rag, not artifact. I had no issue with it. The odor was minimal, and dissipated keep windows open, and wear gloves. This is a messy job. I had 3 rags one soft cloth for applying polish, another for wiping with water (samovar was too big to rinse under sink) and another to buff up I Did use a 4th clean polishing rag to wipe away fingerprints after samovar was replaced back to buffet. You may want to keep soft paper towels on hand, this is messy as the blue green tarnish comes off A lot, especially if there is a build up. So, in small divided areas I applied polish with rag in small circular movements. The tarnish lifted in seconds..Wiped up residue ,rinsed with water and buffed up ...done. Took about 45 mins, but this is a large piece with several parts including teapot. Looks like new. I tried to take photos but reflection is great, and I am not good at photos. I can see stamps again, and will see if i can get someone with old Russian language skills to interpret it for me

My mother used to tell me that this was the best brass cleaner? and she was right. I use this for everything brass and it truly is easy and it is a great product. I last used it on 20 tools brass drawer pulls and it made my furniture look great! Please continue making it and having it available on Amazon since I can’t find in stores.

We have a few older Stiffel brass lamps, which blackened a bit over time. This Weiman product worked great in restoring them to new condition. Back to shiny brass in about 20 minutes for each lamp. It does take a little bit of elbow grease, but was easier than I thought it would be. For three lamps, it used about 1/3 of the bottle. I used one microfiber cloth to apply and rub, one damp one to rinse and one to dry.

This product is hands down the most effective of the ones I tried. I was redoing a dresser that has to be at least 50 years old, with hardware that was beyond filthy, and covered in half a century's worth of grime. It still took quite a few rounds of cleaning, only because there were so many layers of crud. That being said, there was no hard scrubbing involved, and everything wiped off. Even when things looked to the naked eye, it was still pulling off tarnish. Highly recommend

Used on 2 antique brass lamps, which I'd had in our storeroom 20 yrs. They had turned really dark. This stuff cleaned and brightened them right up and fast. I like the consistency..yes it is watery, which makes it easy to spread and use. It also makes dry to buffing time faster and easier. It could not have worked better regarding ease of use or results. I found it to be as good or better than the Brasso of old.

I only use Wright's brass polish, as did my mother , because it is the best brass polish out there. It removes tarnish easily without scratching the brass or being subjected to highly toxic and noxious fumes. Many of my brass pieces were inherited, dating from the era before tarnish resistant brass, so they require frequent polishing to stay bright.

I have an antique brass table. This is the BEST brass cleaner I have ever used; I have used all of the other's, they don't compare. The best thing about this is you rub it on, wash it off, dry and poof, you have SHINE! Simple, simple, simple. As far as I know, you can only get this product now by ordering on-line.