The Art of Hand-Polishing Precision Optics

Growing up in a household of artists and engineers, Peter Thelin was destined for a career in which artistry mattered. Only for him, art has come in the form of manipulating the shapes, sizes and qualities of optics. And now, as one of the few remaining practitioners of hand-polishing optics, Thelin is passing his artistry along to the next generation of optics specialists.

Written byLawrence Livermore National Laboratory
| 3 min read
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“Art is anything you put your mind to,” says Thelin, who has been perfecting his hand-polishing skills for more than 30 years. His career began in 1978, hand-polishing optics at Zygo Corporation in Middlefield, Connecticut, while pursuing a passion for cartooning and painting. He soon realized that polishing optics, too, was a form of art, and he looked to Lawrence Livermore Laboratory as the epicenter of cutting-edge technologies. His dream of working at the Laboratory came true in December 1988, and Thelin has been a master optician at the Lab ever since.

Thelin notes that few people today still do what he does, and that hand polishing optics is a curiosity and a topic of discussion at trade shows and among his peers, who are always eager to learn what materials he’s working with.
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