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The consistency of your bevel is the primary factor in whether or not your polish will look consistent, not a factor of the stones prior in your progression other than making your blade road consistent and true, to allow the finer stones to take over from. There is no need to attempt to 'build' a kasumi on your way up through the grits, just focus on erasing scratches at each step. Muddy stones will hide scratches that won't show themselves until you get to your finest stones, necessitating going back to remove them properly. Harder, fast stones that don't hide scratches are preferable for most polishing work, until you get to your finishing stone(s). *I mentioned that the Ozuku tomae is softer than you might expect from a tomae, but I meant to say softer than you might expect from an Ozuku. Ozuku are known for their hard, often grey stones. Slightly softer green rock such as mine are from the earlier outer most layer of the mine, quarried in the early 20th century.