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Titanium Surface Finishes Explained: Stonewash, Blued, DLC, and Beyond

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FEGVE EDC

Surface Finish Isn’t Just About Looks

When choosing a titanium EDC tool, the surface finish affects three things: how it looks, how it feels, and how it ages. A mirror-polished keychain and a stonewash keychain are the same titanium — but they behave completely differently in your pocket.

Stonewash

Stonewash

How it’s made: Parts tumbled with ceramic media for 2-4 hours. Uniform micro-indentations scatter light, creating a matte texture.Feel: Slightly textured — more grip than polished, less than meteorite crater. Doesn’t collect pocket lint.Aging: The best aging profile. Existing texture means scratches blend in. A year of carry looks better than new.Best for: Daily carry. If you buy one finish, make it stonewash.

Blued (Thermal Oxidation)

How it’s made: Heated to 400-600°C. The TiO₂ oxide layer thickens, producing interference colors.

Temperature Color
~370°C Pale straw
~400°C Gold
~500°C Blue
~550°C Purple

Feel: Identical to bare titanium (oxide is 30-160nm thick — too thin to feel).Aging: Color can’t chip or peel (it is the oxide, not a coating). Softens gradually with abrasion. Most find the aged look appealing.Best for: Display pieces, collectors, color without coating maintenance.

Gradient

How it’s made: Selective heating creates a color transition — natural silver to deep blue/purple. Every piece is one-of-a-kind.Best for: Collectors who want a unique piece.

PVD / DLC

How it’s made: Vacuum chamber, ion bombardment deposits 1-5μm film. DLC = black (HV 2000-4000 hardness). TiN = gold. TiAlN = rose gold.Feel: Smoother than bare titanium. Glass-like.Aging: Excellent when intact — coating is harder than titanium. But if breached, the contrast is visible. It’s either pristine or damaged.Best for: Blacked-out aesthetics, maximum scratch resistance.

Anodized

How it’s made: Electrochemical process — part as anode in electrolyte. Voltage controls oxide thickness = color.Look: Vibrant, saturated colors (blues, purples, greens, pinks, full rainbow). More vivid than thermal bluing.Best for: Bold color options, display pieces.

Meteorite Crater

How it’s made: CNC-engraved with ball-nose end mill, then hand-finished to break sharp edges. FEGVE’s signature texture.Look: Uniform craters catch and scatter light. Dynamic, organic. Combined with bluing, color pools in craters for stunning depth.Feel: Tactile, grippy, not abrasive. The most textured finish FEGVE offers.Aging: Craters collect hand oils, developing two-tone patina. Improves with months of carry.Best for: Premium keychains, tactile satisfaction.

Mirror / Polished

How it’s made: Progressive diamond paste polishing (15μm → 0.5μm). 1-3 hours per part.Look: Jewelry-grade mirror. Most visually striking — and highest maintenance.Aging: Every fingerprint and scratch is visible. Not recommended for daily pocket carry.Best for: Display pieces, desk objects, special occasions.

Comparison

Finish Scratch Visibility Grip Maintenance Aging
Stonewash Very Low Medium None Excellent
Blued Medium Normal Low Good
Gradient Medium Normal Low Good
PVD/DLC Low (binary) Smooth Low Good (if intact)
Anodized Medium Normal Low Fair
Meteorite Crater Very Low High None Excellent
Mirror Very High Low High Poor for carry

How to Choose

Daily pocket carry: Stonewash. Hides scratches, develops character, zero maintenance.Display and collection: Blued, Gradient, or Anodized.Tactical/blackout: DLC black.Tactile satisfaction: Meteorite Crater.Special occasions only: Mirror.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I change the finish on my FEGVE product?
Technically yes (re-machine and re-treat), but not cost-effective. Choose carefully.Is DLC the same as Cerakote?
No. DLC is vacuum-deposited (HV 2000-4000). Cerakote is spray-applied ceramic-polymer (9H). FEGVE uses DLC for superior hardness on small parts.Learn more about titanium as an EDC material.

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