![]() ![]() ![]() Then, during a supposed exorcism, she somehow summons a mysterious djinn warrior named Dara, whose magic is both real and incomprehensibly powerful. On the streets of 18th-century Cairo, young Nahri-she has a real talent for medicine but lacks the wherewithal to acquire proper training-makes a living swindling Ottoman nobles by pretending to wield supernatural powers she doesn’t believe in. I'd advise you to wear gloves, as it will stain your skin.A rich Middle Eastern fantasy, the first of a trilogy: Chakraborty’s intriguing debut. Home Depot carries it, among other places. I used it to clean photographic processing trays and tanks in the 70's an 80's. I've still got some 8mm Mauser brass that received that treatment back in the 70s and 80s, been tumbled in corn husk a couple of times since then, but the color is still yellow.Probably sulfamic acid. You could look into it and maybe find out what the substance was, and maybe it might have been HC. I think the crystals were some sort of acid. The liquid turned black, but was supposedly reusable, although I could never get it to work a second time. One spread it out on a newspaper in the sun to dry. The brass came out clean but yellowish, and I mean sort of half-ripe banana yellow, not shiny golden. glass jar, dumped in the brass, and shook the jar for awhile. You mixed it with warm water preferably in a 1 gal. Inside the can was a cellophane envelope with some yellowish crystals in it. It came in a little metal can like a miniature paint can-you had to pry the lid off with a screwdriver or similar. Once upon a time, as all good stories begin, there was a product named "Case Bright". ![]()
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