Donn wrote:To me, "scratch brush" means the fairly coarse treatment I have seen in pictures from that leisure-time outfit in Indiana or wherever it is. Usually along with some faux antiquing color and bronze or reddish lacquer. Extremely tacky, in my opinion. Best use of this technique is for lamps and doorknobs and such, and even then it's tacky. If you want tacky, metallic gold spray paint should do it.
Put me down for bright. Color finish if you want something different, though I guess that will look bad pretty fast as it chips off.
I don't who leisure-time is, so I can't speak about that. I do know that the scratch finish has to be done correctly to look good. Secondly, the degreasing and clean up has to be top notch for the lacquer to look good on top of the scratch finish. If there is ANY dirt left at all, the finish will look cheap.
To do the finish correctly, you should (but don't have to) do it by hand, and be very careful to follow the shape of the tubes and keep the finish uniform.
Personally, after some deep thought, I am really leaning towards a standard high polish finish.