Lead carbonate is "flake white" or "white lead". It was the common white pigment prior to titanium dioxide. It is available from Kremer Pigmente/Sinopia.
www.sinopia.com I bought a big plastic sack of the stuff. Probably a half a gallon. Cost me very little....ten bucks maybe. I have enough lead carbonate to last me about four lifetimes.
To do oil alone...making "black oil" or "red oil" for use as a boiled linseed oil finish:
Put about two pints of good quality cold pressed linseed oil in your deep fat fryer thing. It needs to be just at a very low rolling boil. Just turning over. It doesn't need to be any hotter than that. Add about 1 tsp for every pint of oil (it ain't that critical). You can also add the same amount of an umber pigment, which is also a drying agent. The oil will turn dark reddish brown. The smell will also change, unfortunately.
Now, I want my oil thick. The longer you boil it, the thicker it will get. Basically, when boiling, it is taking up oxygen (as I understand it), and it is "predrying". I boiled my last batch of oil for an hour and a half. DO NOT leave it unattended. DO NOT let it get too hot. DO NOT do this without the properly fitting lid for your fryer and a fire extinguisher at hand.
The resultant concoction is pretty durn thick. When through boiling, let it cool a while (but it needs to still be warm enough to pour out of the cooker), and then pour it into glass jars. It will be so thick, that you will have to use a good amount of turpentine to use it. (Getting it the thickness you want is a lot of trial and error. At intervals, dip some out with a stick, let it cool, and see how thick or thin it is.) It dries fast, and I can do a good boiled linseed oil finish in less than a week, given good weather and sunshine.
For varnish, I can't have it that thick. I've tried, it's just not workable. It has to be thinned heavily with turpentine (in fact, I end up with more turpentine than varnish), it gets tacky immediately, I can't smooth it out with my hands, and it doesn't level. So, I have to leave it much thinner.
My last batch of varnish I boiled for just a half hour. I added (I think...) 6oz. of rosin and 2oz. of Mastic. These two resins melt and fuse readily in the hot oil. Benzoine will work too, but it is absolutely FILTHY, and I haven't come up with a decent means to filter it out. The varnish is still relatively thin and fluid. Not much thicker than the oil was originally. It flows wonderfully, and I can smooth it out with my hands, and I don't have to worry about trying to smooth it off after it dries, which is a bad thing all the way around. It does not dry nearly as quickly as my thick black oil. It must be put on THIN. This cannot be emphasized enough. T-H-I-N. After the grain is filled with linseed oil or shellac, and the surface is prepared, rub on a coat of the varnish very thin with your hands, and set it out in the sun to dry. I have found that with what I am using now, it will sort of dry to the touch in a day of good sunlight. It needs several days of solid sunlight before it is really thoroughly dry, and will no longer fingerprint. DO NOT get impatient. It absolutely MUST dry thoroughly before recoating, or it will never dry completely. if each coat takes a week, it takes a week. If each coat takes two weeks, it takes two weeks. Repeat as necessary.
I MAY be able to reduce the drying time by adding more lead carbonate...I don't know yet, but this is where I stand at the moment. As I understand it, old oils/varnishes have been tested and they show VERY high lead/lead carbonate levels, so I think they probably really poured it in.