Darrin,
Lead carbonate is "Flake White", or "White lead". It is the historical white paint pigment, and was used prior to titanium dioxide. I have a huge sack of it. Enough to poison every paint-eating baby in the state. Got it from Kremer-Pigmente, which now, I think is handled in the US entirely by Sinopia. Doesn't cost much...which is probably why I ended up with such a huge amount.
The boiled linseed oil I'm using now is like 2/3rds of a quart of "Varnish makers oil" from Wood Finishing Enterprises, which is a really nice quality purified cold pressed oil. It was like $30 a gallon, I think, so it's not all that expensive. To which, I added a teaspoon of lead carbonate and a teaspoon of a burnt umber (for the manganese content, which is reportedly a good drying agent as well). Boiled for about an hour. Dries like crazy.
It's too thick like this to make varnish work well for me. I need to do some more experiments with varnish. Too thick, and it is sticky, no matter how much I cut it with turpentine, and it gets tacky immediately upon application to the wood, and it won't level out, and I can't smooth it with my hands like I would like to. I have some that I made that I didn't boil very long, and it stays thin and fluid, and levels BEAUTIFULLY, but takes absolutely forever to dry. I need to find the happy medium. Something that flows and levels, but dries in a reasonable amount of time.
I'm going to try boiling, with NO driers added and see what I come up with.