I actually was trying to get some general guidelines as to what finishes were used. Was there a "right" finish for a given period and/or location. ...
...from what I understand, browning was not used until late in the flint period if at all.
...So that leaves bluing. Should it be charcoal blue or rust blue? Bruce
The only time there is one "right" finish that I know of is in military arms. The British muskets of the Rev War period seem to have been finished bright and kept that way by frequent polishing.
There are two types of bluing that involve heat, The "spring temper blue" or "draw blue" that is produced at about 600 degrees was definitely used on gun barrels and mounts (as well as sword blades and suits of armor) for all the 18th and most of the 19th century. However it is not terribly durable and surviving period examples are mostly on arms that have been preserved in European collections. Here is a link to pictures of a pistol I fire blued in 1976:
http://flintriflesmith.com/GunshopEraGuns/iron_mounted_pistol.htmCharcoal bluing has been discussed many time on this board. There are many examples of American rifles of the 1775-1820 period with traces of charcoal blue surviving on protected surfaces. Jaegers give an even wider date range and I would not hesitate to use charcoal blue on a rifle depicting the 1750s if I were making such a hypothetical piece. An ad in the Virginia Gazette in 1751 says "barrels bored, blued, and rifled." At the other end of the date range, the contract rifles made in private shops in VA for the War of 1812 were charcoal blued.
Browning Should also be easy to find in a search of the archives. It is mentioned in
Essay On Shooting (published in London in 1789) as being the preferred finish on fowler barrels. That reference refers to it as something "new" but does not assign a date. There are ads in American newspapers for browning
and bluing by the 1790s. (Some have argued that the bluing referred to was rust bluing but I have seen no documentation or surviving evidence of that.)
Charcoal bluing and browning seem to coexist happily from the 1790s until the 1830s or so. After that I don't care!
So, there is no ONE right finish! For a late flint rifle, bright, charcoal blued, or browned are all acceptable.
Gary