Please. Leave a craftsman some secrets.is that battery acid with vinegar and also urine? Or each of those by itself?
If you have the stones to p*ss in a bucket of battery acid, you deserve the outcome lolPlease. Leave a craftsman some secrets.
http://www.permanentstyle.co.uk/2009/04/shoes-with-earthworm-patina.html?m=1If you have time you could also remove the buttons and bury them for a few years if the patination is against your principles. I find that five years is just about long enough
I have seen brass lacquered, but that would be no good if the item was rubbing against anything.Shiny brass will age and patina in time, just through constant rubbing and contact with one's hands. I have a brass watch-chain that does that all the time, and I keep having to buff it with Brasso.
That said, on the opposite side of the fence - if you have brass that you've shineyed up and you want it to stay shiny without constantly having to polish it - how can you treat it to retain the shine?
Yes people do it. Most often with statues after being pasted with dog excreta. The time in the ground allows bacteria and fungi to grow on the surface to give the mottled patina.
is that battery acid with vinegar and also urine? Or each of those by itself?
If the latter I'd recommend you save money by using your own p***.
Good luck
I have seen brass lacquered, but that would be no good if the item was rubbing against anything.