You had previously told me that there was no documentation.
There is none for beeswax as a wood finish that anyone has found. EXCEPT one Army officer who, I have been told, had his men scrape their muskets then apply beeswax apparently since they had nothing else to keep them busy.
A least we have SOME documentation for spirit and oil varnishes.
So how about finding the use of BW is Colonial America? What WAS it used for?
The only person I know who would possibly know thinks its ludicrous.
My point is that there are makers here who will go to great lengths to make things as as they were done in times past. Why would they then put beeswax on the stock if they have no mention of it. Mentions of stock finish are pretty rare at any rate. People here report that it water spots on furniture. I know it will absorbe surface moisture and cloud just like pure linseed will. How long it takes to recover I do not know. But it takes hours of wet for LS on a stock to do this and it only does it where there is hand contact on the wood. The only time I have had this occur was hunting almost all day in snow and cold and the snow melted where my hand contacted the stock and raised the temp.
I did find this in a 10 second Google search but context is missing from the excerpt.
From
http://www.springerlink.com/content/p0271p69151674u7/**********************
Summary Analysis of the IR spectra of waxes isolated from samples of paints from paintings dating from the Ist to VIIth centuries of our era and fragments of archaeological antique murals has shown that in some cases the wax isolated is pure beeswax and in others it contains as impurities what are presumably resin acids, and also salts of fatty acids. The IR spectrum of pure beeswax extracted from a fragment buried for 2000 yr is absolutely identical with the spectrum of modern beeswax, which shows the extreme chemical stability of the wax.
**********************
Nor does it give a percentage of wax or if paints later than the 7th Century contained any beeswax. Though the full text may very well have this information.
And as an *ingredient* is different that using straight BW.
How about documentation from the paint and varnish making of 18th or even the 19th century?
Time to go VOTE.
Dan