I need input from this august body as regards the Emmert i'm restoring for resale.
Mr Scott is making me a handle and new swivel clamp (YAY), I've resolved all the mechanical coditions and have it working like new. The burning question is WHAT COLOR?
I do not want to use boiled linseed oil, thats out. I assume the original color was black. I've toyed with using my Hammerite blue, a color i love, but I worry about originality.
So if you were an Emmert collector and you were spending 600-800 large, what would you want to see for a color on this thing? BTW, my wife saysvto go with the Rustoleum Spruce green satin.
thank you all in advance.
It wouldn't be my favourite in terms of my own aexthetic preference (a light French grey, or a soft pale green would suit me), but, for a 'collector', you really must do your best to duplicate, or 'replicate' the original finish.
To do this, mix your paint as did the machinery builders of that time-frame......boiled linseed oil, a bit of japan dryer, 'pigment' and thin to suit with either mineral spirits or turpentine. The colour 'pigment' is simply 'carbon black', available in an ultra-fine powder as 'lampblack'.
You can find 'recipes' for this class of paint, on the internet, and vary the proportions of the ingredients a bit for purpose of experiment, on 'dummy' parts, til you get the optimal 'body' and 'flow-out' character of the paint.
This will replicate the original finish. The generality of small products like vises usually had some amount of 'filler' trowelled with a putty-knife onto the rougher spots in the castings. Some makers would use more filler than did others, depending on the amount of a worker's time they would allot for finishlng.
Remember, this was a class of tool which would get only a 'mediocre' class of paint-work, when it was built.
(the Emmert Co. did use a green for their post-war production of the patternmakers' vise, but all of their production except for the last few years was always black. (altho there could be exceptions.......they may well have finished one or another lot in some specific colour, to special order.....some large hardware supply houses would specify a 'special' colour, as a 'sales gimmick'.)
You can use modern 'fillers' and no one will know the difference.....if you'd wish to be 'correct', the recipes for the old-time fillers can also be found on the internet.
cheers
Carla