If that's your ulterior aim here, Brian, we've had the wrinkle finish discussion before, but I can't remember where, and I'm too lazy to look.
To the ideas in Jock's PM link I will add that people have reported success with a hairdryer on an almost dry excessive coat of rattle can paint. You have to move it around so it doesn't push the tacky paint all in one direction.
I have created a crackle effect with glue, a decoupage trick. See my tricked-out customized Blackhawk 32-CD Q.D. socket wrench set box, linked
here. That was done in layers. Gold base coat. Then Elmer's glue. Then the black top coat. The cracks, prompted by the fast-drying glue, appear parallel and perpendicular to the direction of the brush swipe. I am wondering what would happen if the glue coat was much thinner and the top coat was sprayed on instead of swiped? Maybe I will experiment.
Lastly, there are very good commercial wrinkle paints available in rattle cans. VHT, for example. Found in most automotive stores, but you can order from a fairly large array of colors. If the issue is no prewar Craftsman blue, has anyone tried misting a non-wrinkle prewar Craftsman blue over a light wrinkle paint base that has cured for a full week?