Hi, I have been a member for quite a while but I think this is my first post.
I am a photographer with a particular bent for older cameras and shoot wet plate and film in large formats up to 8"x10"
A friend found this particular camera in a Cash Conv in Murray Bridge in SA and next thing you know I have it sitting in my workshop. It is a Eastman Kodak Century 9A Studio camera a huge beast of a thing and made somewhere between 1906 and 1922. The camera is all mahogany (I think) and the stand is all Cherry (I think) it was painted sometime in its life and I have successfully stripped the paint by using a commercial stripper and cleaned off with a scraper then 99% metho and steel wool. The cleaning off process was reactivating the spirit stain and it has wiped off a tiny bit patchy but the biggest problem is the stand stain is way lighter (and redder) than the camera.
My question (2 fold) is can I just wipe over with a darker (mahoganyish) spirit stain to match all components or will this still be a patchy result? And what to put over the stain as a finish, There is very little info out there on these cameras and all I can find is that they were originally "stained then lacquered" A cameras natural enemy is light (believe it or not) or more precisely reflections so a satin finish would be the order but what?
Thanking you in advance. Michael
Not me but this is her!
https://photos.smugmug.com/Century-9...M/17198a-M.jpg
https://photos.smugmug.com/Century-9...1_194723-M.jpg
https://photos.smugmug.com/Century-9...3_110440-M.jpg
https://photos.smugmug.com/Century-9...6_180955-M.jpg