Blog Reactions
CrunchGear: DIY: How to give your iPhone’s chrome bezel a brushed metal look
Gizmodo: Eliminate Scratches On Your iPhone's Bezel With A Sponge [Fix-it]
| ... Thanks #LifeHacker http://bit.ly/1bxhFB The new brushed finish of my #iTouch http://www.twitpic.com/pwur3, http://www.twitpic.com/pwvf9 11 days ago |
| Was very pleased with the results of this: http://bit.ly/3v1o3M 19 days ago |
| Brush Your iPhone's Bezel to Hide Scuffs and Scratches http://bit.ly/3m5XJ3 21 days ago |
DIY: How to give your iPhone’s chrome bezel a brushed metal look
CrunchGear —
... is one sexy kit, but it generally doesn’t doesn’t stay that way for long. So if your chrome bezel is scratched up, why not give it the brushed metal look? All it takes is a two-sided kitchen sponge and a bit of work to give your iPhone a different look. [via Lifehacker] ...
Eliminate Scratches On Your iPhone's Bezel With A Sponge [Fix-it]
Gizmodo —
... I abused my iPhone and it's got the marks to tell the stories. The most annoying though are the scratches on the pretty silver bezel. Thankfully, as Lifehacker shows us, those can easily be eliminated using a kitchen sponge. ...
¿Cómo sacarle las rallas al iPhone?
Gizmología —
La cantidad de ralladuras que obtienen nuestros teléfonos móviles después de años de guerra son considerables a no ser que seas de esos carcasafan que no lo cuida al máximo y el que nunca lo sacaría si hay demasiado sol para que no se le dañe.
Ahora desde Lifehacker nos llega un video que muestra cómo hacer para quitarle esas rallas al iPhone.
...
¿Cómo sacarle las rayas al iPhone?
Gizmología —
La cantidad de rayas que obtienen nuestros teléfonos móviles después de años de guerra son considerables a no ser que seas de esos carcasafan que no lo cuida al máximo y el que nunca lo sacaría si hay demasiado sol para que no se le dañe.
Ahora desde Lifehacker nos llega un video que muestra cómo hacer para quitarle esas rayas al iPhone.
...
Hide iPhone bezel scratches with a brushed-metal look
Macworld —
... first, to make sure that you’re not using a superglue variant which will itself damage the bits it’s applied to. And, as Just Another iPhone Blog warns, think carefully before you do this procedure: should you have to take your phone in for warranty repair, you never know how Apple might react. Personally, I’d rather put up with a few scratches rather than take a Brillo pad to my electronics—my gizmos and laptops all get that “lived in” look very quickly—but to each his own. [via Lifehacker ]

![Brush Your iPhone's Bezel to Hide Scuffs and Scratches [IPhone]](http://images.dailyradar.com/media/uploads/tech/story_preview/2009/11/03/brush_your_iphone_s_bezel_to_hide_scuffs_and_scrat.jpg)


