Some of the prospect pipes were so badly damaged that I had new ones made to the same specifications. I have a hundred year old pipe organ in my home. Instead of solution from my first letter (which is simple and ingredient is easy available) you can try one of these two recipes: The article is immersed in solution! Goran BudijaĪ. You can use this solution for black coloring of tin and pewter:Ģ00 gm. Although it's about silver, not pewter, I'd conjecture that the sulfide from eggs will tarnish pewter too.Ī. The book you've seen recommended here is for patination of copper and brass, not pewter. "Pewter Studio: Contemporary Projects & Techniques"Ī. If a book has this solution, I wouldn't mind purchasing it. I've seen some other posts here and a book was recommended. Is there a simple method for a hobbyist to get natural patina back onto pewter (without waiting another 100 years)? A shiny lid just doesn't look right on an old antique. Antique stein collectors prefer the age-showing dull look. Occasionally, I'll find an antique where someone has cleaned the natural patina from the pewter. Most steins have pewter lids and thumb lifts. ↓ Closely related postings, oldest first ↓ Leave out "beer" and probably "stein" & "lid" and just search for "aging pewter" and you probably won't have all those people trying to sell you beer steins, and instead will find threads like this one where Goran tries to directly answer your question :-)
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