The glass in beveled mirrors are ground with diamond hones and polished. you can buy machines and the hones for this but it can get expensive. If you really want to do this there sites on homemade beveling machines. (try the DIY site) Good-Luck
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mirrors
They can if they are curved inward (concave). We frequently see this in make-up mirrors that have a flat, or "regular" side, and a concave side that magnifies the image one sees in it.
Hollywood mirrors are more expensive than regular mirrors, for celebrities are "using" them. Go on www.amazon.com and you'll probably find two mirrors exactly the same, but with "Hollywood" typed in front of one name.
If you use blemished mirrors, then you cannot.
here are some: Car rear-view mirrors and side mirrors. Over-the-sink in the bathroom mirrors (for shaving and other uses) Full-length dressing mirrors, often found inside closets Dental mirrors Fun-house mirrors with wavy surfaces Mirrored balls hanging from the ceiling in discos Periscopes Auto mechanics use mirrors held on rods so they can examine hard-to-reach places. Torches have curved mirrors for directing the beam of light Searchlights, floodlights, and spotlights (used in theatres) have similar mirrors. In barbershops so that the customer may see the result, front and back to collect sunlight for solar power generation