Jump to content

Replating Watch Hands


Recommended Posts

Hiya,

Has anyone here ever tried gilding with gold leaf as an alternative (cheaper) solution to getting hands replated?

I have an old Record watch and the plating on the hands was in a horrible state. I tried metallic paint but the results were ghastly. I've just ordered some gold leaf and size and was wondering if anyone has any tips?

Thx

S

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have used gold leaf for gilding hands and even the name of a sea-going boat. But do not use gold size, better to use two-component epoxy varnish and apply the leaf when the varnish layer become tacky. This recipe gives a very hard wearing coat of gold - the boat's name was still shining after 13 years at sea!

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks Colin,

 

That's really helpful - good to know this wasn't a completely mad idea.  From what I read on the internet, the oil based sizes don't produce such a smooth finish, so I ordered some acrylic size.  I will try this first and it should be relatively easy to clean off and go again with epoxy if it doesn't look good.

 

I bought loose leaf gold rather than transfer sheets, so I'm thinking that I will be best off applying the size to the hand and then placing the hand onto the gold rather than the other way around.

 

ro63rto​ - thanks for the suggestion, but the hands are steel, so not sure if this is compatible, and 3 times the cost of what I'm going to try.  Not sure if this piece is a keeper yet!

 

Will let you all know how this goes (when I get the chance).

 

Thx

 

S

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have replated hands using gold plating pen kit that you can find online, it works well for very small parts like hands (but don't expect to replate cases with these kits) and pretty simple to used. The important point is to have a perfect polish and finish before plating.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Bob,

You would need to get some Gold leaf and some size. This has cost me £12 including packaging and delivery.

I think I can improvise everything else, but won't have time to give it a whirl till after Xmas now.

I'll let you all know how it goes but having had a quick peek at the gold leaf I'm wishing I bought the paper backed variety... This stuff makes playing with hairsprings seem positively agricultural!

Wish me luck!

S

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I expect you'll have read up on gold leafing technique but if you're manipulating loose leaf use a brush to pick it up and apply it.

 

Good luck!

 

Yes, using a wide, flat brush is the technique of the specialists (e.g. my late father in law). It maybe too late for you, Stuart, but an easier solution is to buy the gold leaf with a tissue paper backing. It is applied by transfer to the tacky size or varnish, and is a very economical solution since only the necessary amount of gold leaf is used each time.

 

Bob, the transfer technique is self explanatory - almost like kid's transfers except that it is transferred from the paper to a tacky varnished surface. Burnished afterwards with an Agate burnisher gives a superb gold coating.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Good news and bad news... But mostly bad so far.

The best news is that I finally found time to try this out. I've had a couple of goes and both times the initial outcome looked good. Sadly the acrylic size really doesn't stick well to the steel hands I have, and doesn't dry hard enough to burnish the surface at all.

I will be trying Colin's suggestion of 2 part epoxy varnish. I've found something called Diamond Sheen which is used on fishing rods and can be had for about £11, unless anyone has any better suggestions?

Thanks

S

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 5 months later...

Been meaning to update on this for a while. For anyone else thinking of trying this, thought you'd like to know that I gave up at the 5th attempt (or so). Acrylic size just didn't stick well enough and epoxy varnish just didn't give enough control to burnish the gold leaf.

Finally bought a pen plating kit with rose gold solution which worked really well. Pleased with result... still some evidence of rust pitting that was too deep to remove, and would have liked to have matched the colour a little better, but don't know enough about the chemistry to do that.

Watch is an interesting design and I've never seen another Record watch similar. Almost like the designer wanted to use every ingredient in the spice rack (like my cooking). Pear shaped hour markers, 2 tone dial, rose gold bezel on a polished and brushed stainless case, luminous dagger hands! All good fun for those days when you want to be firmly planted in the 1950s!

image.jpeg

Link to comment
Share on other sites



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Thanks Ross, yes i remember the broken arbor screw you had to deal with. Dont give up, if i can drill a tiny hole in a bloody hard barrel arbor without breaking the drill bit then you'll get that screw out one day somehow .
    • Isn't it most correct to say that the mixture of radium decay pathway compounds found in old lume will produce both alpha and beta particle radiation as well as gamma rays, so it's over-simplistic to dismiss it all as low-energy particle emission? True, a cheap geiger counter chirping away with a raw CPM count won't specifically give you the relevant biological dose, but it makes it easy to tell the difference between your local background, a watch with a bit of activity, and one that is comparatively quite active. Each person can make their own risk analysis based on their understanding and concern, but there's nothing wrong with using an inexpensive meter to help make the determination.
    • A lesson I learned last month on a Junghans pocket watch where both pins were bent over like stalks of wheat in the wind. I bent them back straight, wondering what a shock the thing must have taken to somehow bend even the outside pin over. And then the escapement wouldn't unlock at all. Probably the pallet stones are too long but I'm not ready for that repair yet so I bent the pins back over and it runs 0/0.2
    • Never. Brilliant work and photographs. Thank you. On my very first watch I knackered the arbour. I think the screw I put in was the crown screw. I didn't know about left handed screws then. Head sheared off. Thread broken just below surface. If I had the space, then a lathe would be my wished purchase. 2 1/2 years later and I still get the arbour out now and again and...... I can dream. It's a lovely pocket watch. Ah well. 
    • Hello Davis. This thread is interesting. Thought I'd add my twopenneth worth. A short while ago I had a similar problem to you. Not a broken banking pin, but I did alter a banking pin. Much to the consternation of members. Rightly so. However I did as they suggested and obtained a complete donor movement and installed it into the watch. The client, who I did not charge but did the work as a project for myself, was as happy as Larry.  Can you not look for watch of the same name? A Donor watch or movement.  Keep us posted on your result please.
×
×
  • Create New...