Discolored buffalo boss

You spent a small fortune to harvest a really nice buff, now is not the time for DIY. Take it to a well thought of taxidermist that has experience with African mounts. Sometimes it’s best to leave it to the professionals.
 
I use furniture polish on mine. Paint it on with a foam brush. Will look too wet and dark at first, but the horn soaks it up


Wet here, or freshly applied


IMG_0009.png




Dry here. I couldn’t find a dry pic of buffalo.


IMG_0008.png
 
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I use furniture polish on mine. Paint it on with a foam brush. Will look too wet and dark at first, but the horn soaks it up


Wet here, or freshly applied


View attachment 744737



Dry here. I couldn’t find a dry pic of buffalo.


View attachment 744738
We send all clients' skulls out the door with paste wax on the horns/antlers. Brings out the colors nicely but will not change color which seems to be what OP is looking for. Client can buff up the horns to a rich shine or leave them dull and natural looking.

Waxing horns will not harm them. It helps preserve them.
 
+1 on brushing and cleaning, then maybe the black bear hair dye. As it is, it does not look like it did originally.
Nice hard boss BTW
 
It looks like the skull was upside down when they boiled it. The horns makes contact with the bottom of the pot. Hence causing them to burn. That's what it looks like. We see it a lot. With just a photo its hard to tell, but if you chip some off the surface and it looks the same underneath than its most likely burnt.
We fix with epoxy's and than airbrush and add some dirt. We don't like a polished look unless that's the way that they were. Yours doesn't look like it was polished in the dead scene. The fix for you at home is to put multiple sanding sealer on it (burnt spots). Than find a paint that matches the rest of the horn and paint the boss to look the color you want. Sanding sealer will seal the pores in the horn that are burn and let the paint color properly and not have a polished look.
 
Definitely not bark. I’ve never tried shoe polish but I don’t think much different than the oil the taxidermist uses.
Guaranteed the shoe polish will be cheaper than the taxidermists oil !
 
Guaranteed the shoe polish will be cheaper than the taxidermists oil !
Mine has never charged me. They’ve done it while I wait.
 
50/50 linseed oil & turps is what many taxidermists use on horns. Paint on, wipe excess with a rag.
It will darken them somewhat but it replaces the natural oils snd protects them from further degradation.
 
First question is? Do you want them to look like they did when you shot it? Natural and real? Or do you want a black goo all over them? I recommend you follow @buck wild advice if a natural proper look is your desire. If not real but pretty and shinny black is your desire paint with shoe polish, black paint or something like that.

Me I like the as shot look on all my stuff and spend the extra time to do. Taxi supply houses have the correct paints to use, yes it takes time to learn how to do, paying a taxidermist to complete as you like will pay off far longer when you look at them for your life time. You will not remember the small amount of cash to get it done "right". Looking at shoe polish horns may not elicit the same feelings.

MB
 

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