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06-01-2014, 07:17 PM #1
My first shot at a restoration ...
Okay... barely a month after I got my first straight, I sniped this Wade and Butcher off of Ebay a week or so ago. I received it friday and removed the scales... the buffalo horn was in really bad shape. I put the blade in the ole brass vibrator with some new media and some polish and let her run til Sunday morning. Sunday morning I took the blade out, and it had cleaned it up a bunch but there were still some marks on the blade and spine. Hit it on the buffing wheels for about 2 hours ... started with emory, then diamond white, red jewelers rouge, and then just a finishing wheel. So far I am pretty impressed with how it looks. Really hard to take good pictures and get the light / focus right. So far I am please with my first try at this. It was paramount to me NOT to mess up the Masonic etching on the blade. Also, all I can find information wise about the age is that it is most likely pre-1891 since it does not say ENGLAND on the blade. Any help in that regards would be appreciated
I plan on mounting this in a bone scale but am open to suggestion there as well. Many thanks to these forums because I wouldn't have known where to begin without you guys
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06-01-2014, 08:53 PM #2
- Join Date
- May 2014
- Location
- Bryan, TX
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- 1,251
Thanked: 228Looks very nice. I have been picking up the odd SR here and there that will need working on. I will have to try on one of the real bad ones and see what I can do.
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06-02-2014, 12:08 AM #3
- Join Date
- Feb 2013
- Location
- Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada
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Thanked: 4830well that has worked out fairly well. Bone scales would be nice. I just started plating with bone as a scale material. I have to say it heats up fairly quickly on the sander and if you get a burn mark on it, it takes a lot to get it out. I guess the method is slow and easy.
It's not what you know, it's who you take fishing!
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06-02-2014, 12:17 AM #4
- Join Date
- Jun 2007
- Location
- North Idaho Redoubt
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- 27,068
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Thanked: 13249Love the finish that you got from the Tumbler and Polishing,,,
They really do work well for saving and defining the etched blades, I would vote Bone, IMHO it is a nice classy look
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06-02-2014, 12:40 AM #5
May be try darkening the groves of the etching/engraving - basically you develop a black oxidation/ patina across the whole surface with a weak acid and then lightly sand the surface to shine leaving black in the grooves only.
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06-02-2014, 01:55 AM #6
Mr. Gugi,
What acid would be appropriate for that ... would muriatic acid work, or would it take something stronger ??