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#13 | ||||||
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Nice shiny totally untouched Parker receivers got that way over a period of years from honest use and meticulous care after shooting. Brown patina untouched Parker receivers got that way over a period of years from honest use and somewhat less meticulous care after shooting. Once they get brown, I leave them that way because most attempts to make them look shiny or white end up in a non original look. I have a brown and beautiful twenty gauge 1917 VH that is the most wonderful looking Parker, a Parker that would be ruined by any attempt to improve it. By the way, the pictured gun looks a bit like my 20. Bruce's assessment of how they get that way agrees with my opinion of how they get that way. I choose to leave them as is and hunt off the brown.
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#14 | ||||||
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A little update - I took a bit of flitz to the receiver last night and this morning. I found it not nearly as "dangerous" as I anticipated. That's not to say I would ever use it without extreme caution. The major freckling came out with a couple light passes - it definitely brightened up the receiver with most of the brownish patina remaining. I even found some very faint case coloring hiding in a few protected areas.
Sun was shining today - so it appears brighter than it actually is. That's the only cleaning I plan on doing - she shall remain as is currently. ![]() ![]() |
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#15 | ||||||
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VERY briefly, the "Ethics of Patina" are: "I have no idea what happened to it; it was like that when I got it."
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#16 | ||||||
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You would not harm that gun at all if the wood were cleaned with a little refinish, esp. the forend, and the checkering recut.
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