So what is a good source of Tannic Acid to use for experimenting with darkening the stripes etc??? The Science Store has Oxalic Acid which I think is a dirivative from bark, but they do not have "Tannic Acid".....
Ok Tim,
In the book on Bedford County Gunsmiths By James Whisker he cites a store record where a gunsmith purchased a "shale" of tanbark. I suspect that the term used to describe the bundle as "shale" got that because it looked like shale layers in rocks.
So I walked into Dixon's one Sunday. The place was full of shooters getting their T/C Hawken's ready for the flintlock season. I set a quart jar on the counter and told Chuck I needed a quart of wood ashes and a bag of oak bark. You should have seen the strange looks. But I was looking at the deal the way the original gunsmith would have.
The wood ashes from his wood heater would be the source of the "potash" used on the stock after stain application.
With the oak bark I simply peeled it off pieces of oak he had in his wood pile. You scrape the inside of the bark and that dust is rich in tannic acid. If the bark was just a bit loose from the wood while stored you sometimes see a layer of white dust on the surface where the bark came away from the sap wood.
Bark, such as oak, is very rich in tannic acid. Some of the fir trees will also give a good supply of tannic acid from that part of the bark but then they also give color you don't want.
If you stain the stock with nitrate of iron, then neutralize it and then follow with a wash of tannic acid you can end up with a stock that looks more like charcoal.
But you can cheat before you stain. I had given a stock a wash of tannic acid. Left it dry and then did the final scraping. That filled the curl with tannic acid while the scraper removed the tannic acid from between the curl. You can get a very dramatic appearance with this but you must not get too carried away with the pre-treatment with the tannic acid wash.
I have seen originals in Chuck's collection where the curl was jet-black with only very light brown in between the curl.
E. Ogre