The hardest part for me was figuring out how to get the right wheels and make and shape the polishing wheels, and then just how to do the smoothing. Though full of little goofs, all in all I am pleased with this as a first attempt, my biggest critique being that is is very overworked as a result of trying to fix all the boo-boos. (A couple spots still need more re-polished if you look close) To me, a piece loses a certain crispness when worked so hard. However, the next piece is already going much better.
Also I think the obscuring could be done with a little finer grit, not because I don't like a little texture in it, but because it makes for speckles in the polished part and unclean edges around the cuts that have to then be cleaned out again.
Does anybody know how to get cerium oxide out of the obscured parts? I finally got most of it but not without a lot of scrubbing. A degreaser added to the hot water seemed to help. Me thinks the cerium must have little claws that it likes to dig in with.

Thanks,
Inga If you look real close, you can still see where some of the too coarse AO left pitting around the edges while obscuring. It was sifted pretty fine, but there were still some nuggets in there, and I don't really know how coarse. I also got some of Paasche's Air Eraser compound which I believe to be a #400 AO, but that seemed a little too fine.