I have read a good deal here about Aqua Fortis but it seems there may be slight differences in the way it is used from person to person.
Anyone used AF followed by natural Danish oil as a finish? That is my initial thought for the finish but am open to suggestions on going darker or not. May even give beeswax a try instead of oil......
thanks in advance!
You might want to give the beeswax idea long and serious thought. Once you apply any beeswax to the wood that may prevent you from putting another finish on it later. Once the wax wax works into the wood you will not get another finish to adhere to it. And with an oil or oil-based finish it would migrate into the finish and soften it.
To a degree. Intensity and depth of color, on the wood, with a nitrate of iron stain is in part determined by how much iron (as the oxide) you get on and in the wood.
When I worked on it in the lab I set up a beaker of the nitrate of iron stain solution. Used very fast agitation and added potassium carbonate slowly. The idea being to convert the ferric nitrate to ferric oxide under high-speed agitation to get as fine a particle as possible. That gave me a very fine particle size sludge. Down near a micron in size. Then tried this as a wipe on stain. Very dark results.
The magnetic media used in the old recording tapes and computer disks was produced in this. I thought it funny that several hundred year old "technology" was still being used to create modern "high-tech" products.
Ran into the same thing with the copper horn dye. (Project Green Horn). Writings from Pliny, in 50 AD Rome involved copper salts in hide treating before tanning. While at home I was using pressure treated wood treated with copper salts. That project became known as "Pliny to Piney".
Mad Monk