Nitre blue w/ sodium nitrate salts.
We used ammonium nitrate fertilizer for the process a couple of times in a pinch as the sodium nitrate box had been tossed by another worker. It does work.
It's a temper blue color brought about w/o the free oxygen in the atmosphere intefereing with it's forming on the part.
Same idea/different process of course as charcoal blue and later gas oven Carbonia Oil blueing used by most of the mfg'rs.
It can even be done in very fine sand if it's packed tightly around the part to keep the air out.
Just melt the salts in a steel container and bring it up to the temp required for the correct temper color you desire and immerse the part on a wire into it and watch it. The salt is water clear when melted and the color change is easily seen. Takes place in a few seconds to under a minute on most parts but sometimes certain areas lag behind with a reddish cast for a bit.
Some modern types of steel alloys will just not blue well with this method and will always have a reddish color to them esspecially in bright sunlight. Older guns and parts do best with this.
Parts have to be clean,clean before going in,, and dry.
Remember it's an annealing/tempering process as well as a coloring one, but the time in bath is reletively short compared to most annealing directions if you just want color on small parts.
Use it for spring tempering as well (spring temper blue),,or back off on the temp for 'straw color' temper, etc.
A thermometer sold for lead bullet casting is used to check the temp.
Don't get it on you,,don't get any water/moisture any where near it while working with it our you'll be wearing 600F+ splash of it. Same precautions as working with molten lead.
Any salts clinging to the part after pulling from the stuff will dissolve in water,,done afterwards and away from the pot.
Though some souls say they quench the hot part right out of the salts to 'set' the color. You do get a satisfying pop and splatter of water and salts coating flying around when you do that,,but I've never seen it to advance the color fastness any.
In it's molten state that you'll be working with it for blue and blue/black colors, it'll burn right through your clothes and into your skin if it does get on you,I can say that from experience. Protect your eyes at all costs.
Take it up to just under 800F and you'll get a deep blue/black that rivals the early Colt & S&W oven blues. Too far and you get nothing!
Don't let the parts touch the sides of the container, just let them hang in the molten salts.
When done, just let the salts cool and they reharden in the container. Cover tightly afterwards or they'll draw moisture from the air and you'll have a pool of water on top next time.
A heavy but loose fitting cover on top when reheated as it tends to pop and spit a little as it remelts again.
I wouldn't say it's a very tough finish at all,,certainly no where near rust blue. But it's at least as good as some of the modern hot salt blue and better than torch done heat blue.