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  2. How to Clean Marble Floors Without Scratching or Staining ...

    www.aol.com/clean-marble-floors-without...

    To best maintain your marble floor's luster and its cleanliness, consider the following expert-approved tips and tricks. Avoid using bristle brooms or brushes, which could inflict permanent micro ...

  3. Ceramic tile cutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceramic_tile_cutter

    The first tile cutter was designed to facilitate the work and solve the problems that masons had when cutting a mosaic of encaustic tiles (a type of decorative tile with pigment, highly used in 1950s, due to the high strength needed because of the high hardness and thickness of these tiles).

  4. Stonemasonry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stonemasonry

    Splitting a block of marble with plug and feathers A stonemason at Eglinton Tournament Bridge with a selection of tools of the trade. A quarryman splits or cuts rock in the quarry, and extracts the resulting blocks of stone. The cut or split pieces are collected and transported away from the extraction surface for further refinement. [1]

  5. Stone flaming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stone_flaming

    Machine flaming the surface of a stone slab. After removing a rock from a quarry, the rock is sliced into multiple flat slabs using a diamond gang saw.The saw leaves flat surfaces with circular marks.

  6. Masonry trowel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masonry_trowel

    Step trowel: similar to the corner trowel, it is used for shaping inside angles on concrete steps; the center of the 90-degree bend in the blade allows for rounded edges. Tile setter: a brick trowel with an extra-wide blade to hold more mortar than a standard brick trowel. It is ideal for smoothing mortar on large bricks and blocks.

  7. Tumble finishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumble_finishing

    The idea behind the first step is to take rough rock or stone and grind it (tumble it) down into a form which is indistinguishable (in shape) from the final product. [3] This is followed by washing and then a stage of finer grits (120-220 then 400-600 mesh), before the (optional) use of a pre-polishing compound (1200 grit), a washing cycle with ...