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-   -   How to form patina on brass? (http://www.craftbanter.com/showthread.php?t=87683)

Norm Dresner October 2nd 07 05:12 PM

How to form patina on brass?
 
I have a brass casting that I've used in a piece and need to make it look
old and weathered. Are there any household chemicals that will do that or
do I need to purchase a specialty chemical?

TIA
Norm

Andrew Mawson October 3rd 07 03:14 AM

How to form patina on brass?
 

"Norm Dresner" wrote in message
...
I have a brass casting that I've used in a piece and need to make it

look
old and weathered. Are there any household chemicals that will do

that or
do I need to purchase a specialty chemical?

TIA
Norm


Bury it in wet earth for a day or two

AWEM


Tom Gardner[_2_] October 3rd 07 03:14 AM

How to form patina on brass?
 

"Norm Dresner" wrote in message
...
I have a brass casting that I've used in a piece and need to make it look
old and weathered. Are there any household chemicals that will do that or
do I need to purchase a specialty chemical?

TIA
Norm


I did some repair work on an casting that was part of an antique easel for
an art dealer. I matched the patina with an airbrush with layers of
woodworking stains finished with a clear coat. The dealer said that the job
was perfect.


Jeff Wisnia October 3rd 07 03:15 AM

How to form patina on brass?
 
Norm Dresner wrote:

I have a brass casting that I've used in a piece and need to make it look
old and weathered. Are there any household chemicals that will do that or
do I need to purchase a specialty chemical?

TIA
Norm


I use a chemical sold as "Liver of Sulphur" by some jewelry supply and
crafts shops.

http://tinyurl.com/2xtgzw

Works great for me.

HTH,

--
Jeffry Wisnia
(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)
The speed of light is 1.8*10^12 furlongs per fortnight.


Carl October 3rd 07 03:15 AM

How to form patina on brass?
 
When Norm Dresner put fingers to keys it was 10/2/07 12:12 PM...

I have a brass casting that I've used in a piece and need to make it look
old and weathered. Are there any household chemicals that will do that or
do I need to purchase a specialty chemical?


Pack it in sawdust in a waterproof container.
**** on it for a couple of weeks.
Really.

- Carl

Harold and Susan Vordos October 3rd 07 03:15 AM

How to form patina on brass?
 

"Norm Dresner" wrote in message
...
I have a brass casting that I've used in a piece and need to make it look
old and weathered. Are there any household chemicals that will do that or
do I need to purchase a specialty chemical?

TIA
Norm


Check in Machinery's Handbook-----where it details how to color brass and
bronze.

Harold


Andrew Werby October 3rd 07 03:15 AM

How to form patina on brass?
 

"Norm Dresner" wrote in message
...
I have a brass casting that I've used in a piece and need to make it look
old and weathered. Are there any household chemicals that will do that or
do I need to purchase a specialty chemical?

TIA
Norm


[Try sealing it up in a plastic bag with some open containers of household
ammonia.]

Andrew Werby
www.unitedartworks.com



jb October 3rd 07 03:15 AM

How to form patina on brass?
 
On Oct 2, 11:12 am, "Norm Dresner" wrote:
I have a brass casting that I've used in a piece and need to make it look
old and weathered. Are there any household chemicals that will do that or
do I need to purchase a specialty chemical?

TIA


After cleaning a brass black powder revolver, take a wet dirty patch
(such as one that just cleaned the bore) and wipe the brass and let it
set. The black powder residue really makes a gun look very old in a
short time.


Abrasha October 3rd 07 09:31 AM

How to form patina on brass?
 
Norm Dresner wrote:
I have a brass casting that I've used in a piece and need to make it look
old and weathered. Are there any household chemicals that will do that or
do I need to purchase a specialty chemical?

TIA
Norm


**** on it.

--
Abrasha
http://www.abrasha.com

Peter W.. Rowe, October 3rd 07 09:39 AM

How to form patina on brass?
 
On Tue, 02 Oct 2007 19:15:20 -0700, in rec.crafts.jewelry Carl
wrote:

When Norm Dresner put fingers to keys it was 10/2/07 12:12 PM...

I have a brass casting that I've used in a piece and need to make it look
old and weathered. Are there any household chemicals that will do that or
do I need to purchase a specialty chemical?


Pack it in sawdust in a waterproof container.
**** on it for a couple of weeks.
Really.

- Carl


And Abrasha also replied,,


**** on it.

--
Abrasha
http://www.abrasha.com


For the squeemish, if you've got a cat, you've got a ready made agent. Save
some of the dampened/used cat litter from the cat's litter pan (just the litter.
You don't need the cat crap), and bury the item in that. Cat **** is rather
more concentrated than human, so works very well. And the granular litter will
give somewhat spotty grainy contact with the metal, giving an interesting
texture to the patina. Seal up the container you're doing this in so it
doesn't dry out.

For the even more squeemish, or those without a cat, use sand or cat litter
sawdust or whatever, and pour in a little household ammonia. Also mix in some
table salt. Stir well and bury the item in this mess. Stir it a bit every now
and then till you like the finish.

Both these methods often give you some nice blue/green corrosion products. If
all you wish is dark grey/black, then sulphur compounds like liver of sulphur
work well. Or try egg yolks, which also have sulphur. Takes longer. Liver of
Sulphur can do the job in minutes.

Peter Rowe


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