My son bought me a horn kit for Christmas and I'm busy messing around with it to see what I can do.
In my readings on the web about horn making, I was looking for ideas about dyeing it.
A site set up by someone named Mad Monk mentions using several different copper based dyes as being a "traditional" method of dyeing a powder horn.
(I don't know if this is the real "Mad Monk" of blackpowder fame or not. I suspect it is someone else.)
Anyway, as some of you know, some bugs love to gnaw on animal parts like horns and using a copper dye ends up making the horn so unpalatable that even a starving bug will pass on it.
The most commonly available copper compound that was used copper sulfate which is sold at hardware stores to keep roots out of sewer systems.
The reason for my post here is, have any of you folks used copper sulfate to stain your horns and if so, how well did it stain the horn and what color did it end up being?
Here's a link to the article
http://shoot7.tripod.com/madmonk.html
In my readings on the web about horn making, I was looking for ideas about dyeing it.
A site set up by someone named Mad Monk mentions using several different copper based dyes as being a "traditional" method of dyeing a powder horn.
(I don't know if this is the real "Mad Monk" of blackpowder fame or not. I suspect it is someone else.)
Anyway, as some of you know, some bugs love to gnaw on animal parts like horns and using a copper dye ends up making the horn so unpalatable that even a starving bug will pass on it.
The most commonly available copper compound that was used copper sulfate which is sold at hardware stores to keep roots out of sewer systems.
The reason for my post here is, have any of you folks used copper sulfate to stain your horns and if so, how well did it stain the horn and what color did it end up being?
Here's a link to the article
http://shoot7.tripod.com/madmonk.html
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