Menorah Repairs
I can polish, repair and restore sterling silver, silver plate, and brass menorahs. Send me photos and let me know what you need to be done. A frequent request is to replace a Shamash that is lost. While I can make anything, there are no replacement parts. Replacing the Shamash is always a custom made one-of-a-kind part plus the reconstruction of the arm or attachment.
Custom Shamash Replacement
Custom-made Shamash for a traditional antique brass Menorah / Hannukiah
Unfortunately, the Shamash is often lost on these antique Menorahs as it was designed to be removable. It is much better to use the candle as a Shamash. The replacement Shamash was custom-made to match this antique Menorah exactly with both a matching arm and candle cup which I fabricated to match. These projects are multi-step and take months. It requires a custom one-of-a-kind shrink-proof mold to cast a matching candle cup. That was just the beginning.
Custom made Shamash to replace missing Shamash
The 100-year-old brass Menorah was missing the original Shamash. The original was lost a long time ago. I had one of the candle cups cast in a one-of-a-kind non-shrink mold so it matched exactly. Then I fabricated a post and structure for the new Shamash to fit into the existing structure of the Menorah. After all the fabrication, the Menorah was polished as the final step. This was an expensive repair because of one-of-a-kind casting for an exact duplicate of the other candle cups. It also takes a lot of time to fabricate a new Shamash holder that will sit at exactly the right height with modifications so it would not swing side to side and melt the other candles.
Sterling silver Menorah
Repair and Polishing
This sterling silver Menorah arrived for repair and polishing. The arms would no longer sit on top and were held in place with white first-aid tape. It was originally purchased in Israel in the mid-20th century. The customer wanted the arms to firmly sit on top, but be easy to disassemble for polishing without needing special tools.
Watch this video to see this innovative repair that avoided altering the original menorah and satisfied the customers expectations. After the repair the lacquer was removed from the candlestick, and the menorah was polished. It turned out amazing.
Sterling silver menorah (left) is mid-20th century from Israel. The upper portion is cast which is both fragile and brittle. The cups and base are spun. It was polished carefully with 1" buffing wheels to avoid catching the curly, delicate design.
Repair of 20th-Century Sterling Silver Menorah
This Menorah is an example of late 20th-century Judaica. My observation is that it was made from silver that was way to thin to survive generations. Yes, I was able to repair this by reinforcing it on the inside and the outside of where it broke. The bent candle cups were also straightened. Still, that Menorah will always be fragile, the sterling silver is as thin as a piece of paper. When using your Menorah support the candle cups when inserting candles. Polish very gently with Q-tips and make-up squares.
Sterling Silver Menorah Base with Bent Feet
In the below photo you can see that the feet of this sterling silver menorah base had been badly bent. Even though this is a simple base, if it isn’t sitting flat and is rocking back and forth, it becomes a hazard. Aside from the bent feet, the base was otherwise in decent shape. As you can see in the after photos, I was able to straighten out the feet. The base was not heavily polished so that it would match the menorah attachments that were not sent to me. The owner wanted to make sure that the menorah would still be useable and thought that if it were too polished people might be afraid to handle it. The customer was very happy with the results.
Antique Silver Plate
Menorah Restoration
Antique silver plate and gold plated Hanukkian Before and After Restoration
Very often these old menorahs no longer screw together because the screws are broken or the screw threads are damaged. This is a time consuming repair because the old screws are rarely standard sizes. It takes hours to figure out the best size for taping new threads and replacing the screws and nuts with solid brass screws. It takes hours. In this case after making sure everything screwed together, I modified the Shamash so it was stable. Then after removing the gold plated decorative elements, the rest of the Hanukkian was silver plated.
Restoration of vintage
Mid-20th Century Menorah
This vintage mid-20th century Chanukah Menorah was missing a candle cup for the shamash. The challenge was to make a new candle cup that matched both the shape and the aesthetic of the original menorah. An additional concern was to avoid damaging the oxidized patina and original finish on the rest of this menorah constructed from sterling silver, brass and copper.
Cast Brass Menorahs
200-Year-Old Brass Menorah Shabbat candlestick Restored
This old menorah arrived mostly in pieces. Nothing screwed together properly. I guess that it was 200 years old as many of the screws were hand made tapered screws and inconsistent with modern threads. It was obvious that it had many old repairs. Many of the parts did not screw together. It took me close to eight months to figure out a solution that was as conservative as possible. On very old objects, I want my restoration to avoid significant modifications.
“Why does it have two Shamas?” I asked. The family story was that the two candleholders in front were for Shabbat candles. So when Chanukah candles were lit during Shabbat there was would be a place for the Shabbos candles.
Mid 20th century Menorah before and after repair and polishing
This mid-20th century menorah was dirty, tarnished and broken. One of the candle cups had fallen off, three others were loose. It is important to have an object like this repaired before the candle cups are lost. After the repair, this menorah was cleaned removing old dusty wax, and then the brass was polished very carefully to avoid the painted/patina finish on the arm. One side says, Israel in English. The other side is Hebrew.
All of these menorahs are cast brass from the mid-20th century. After they were repaired they were polished to restore their appearance.
Notice how the brass Menorah with lions is so similar to the 200-year-old Menorah (shown above.) These motifs are reused over and over through the years and are not an indication of age.