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Making an oil cloth and have a question

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  • #16
    Re: Making an oil cloth and have a question

    Originally posted by Stonewall_Greyfox View Post
    Authentic Campaigner?

    Paul B.
    I agree with Paul...
    Tristan Galloway

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    • #17
      Re: Making an oil cloth and have a question

      My vision may be off but as i am only 18 i do not think it is but does the mixture look a little brown to anyone else?

      Your most humble and obedient servant,
      Erik W Creekmore,
      Your most humble and obedient servant,
      Erik W Creekmore,
      2nd Col Vol Inf.

      Sgt Major, Territorial Battalion.

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      • #18
        Re: Making an oil cloth and have a question

        ...Zinsser Shieldz ready-to-use acryclic clear...

        Originally posted by Stonewall_Greyfox View Post
        Authentic ...?

        Paul B.
        No, it isn't.
        B. G. Beall (Long Gone)

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        • #19
          Re: Making an oil cloth and have a question

          Huh? That's not Jack's method. He lists four recipes in his article. All of which can be found here : http://44tennessee.tripod.com/articles//oilcloth.pdf The four are : a modern recipe, a period recipe, the Confederate Ordnance Manual recipe which he tells people to use at their own risk sue to the use of litharge ; and a turpentine-based recipe which is issues sufficient hazard warnings in red type that he does not recommend or endorse.

          He declares in the article that the modern recipe is inauthentic and questions why someone would "want to 'fake it' with a modern approximation when a good period recipe is available."

          For the period recipe, he writes :

          I strongly recommend this recipe because it is about as authentic as you can get without putting life and limb in danger.

          Materials:

          Boiled linseed oil
          Mineral spirits
          paint thinner (or turpentine)
          Lampblack (comes in tubes or dry powder)
          Japan dryer
          Corn starch
          I don't see where Jack recommended or even listed the use of clear acrylic. He did list black latex paint in his modern recipe, but that was in a method where he questioned the use thereof. Maybe he could have described it as the mainstream method ...
          Silas Tackitt,
          one of the moderators.

          Click here for a link to forum rules - or don't at your own peril.

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