Lock It Up!

January 25, 2012

On Monday, I let you know I had a little somethin' somethin' in the works for the bathroom. We have just under a month until we're ripping into the ugliest room in the house, so I'm getting as many little things as I can done before we start.

So what does a crock pot and steel wool have to do with, well, anything?

Restoring antique hardware!


The bathroom door is a solid wood 4 panel door typical of Victorian homes. These doors would either have a mortised lock or a rim lock - it's not very often that a door was fitted with just a knob. Our door is covered in layers and layers of paint, but we could see the shadow of where a rim lock used to be, and the keeper was still attached to the jamb. Whatever happened to the original rim lock? Who knows.

 
From left to right: 4-panel door, mortise lock, rim lock (please click for picture source).

There was another keeper hanging out in a door-less door frame on the other side of the kitchen (I suspect that the bathroom was originally a pantry *note to self: share a floor plan one day* - apparently back in the day people felt the need to be able to lock their kitchens and their pantries off from the rest of the house). We found the missing door in the shack before it collapsed, and it still had it's rim lock - hooray! We have no intention of putting that door back in it's place (it's weathered and cracked beyond repair), so I removed the rim lock for the bathroom door.

It was a hot mess, and that's being polite.

antique cast iron rim lock

antique cast iron rim lock

The first thing I had to do to get this back in working order was to take it apart. Since it had been caked in paint in a previous life, I used a dental pick type tool to scrape the paint out of the screwdriver notch (what's the real term for that?!).

Antique cast iron rim lock

I removed the screw - making sure I put it somewhere safe! - and the back came off easily.

antique cast iron rim lock

It was pretty gross in there. I have a feeling this thing hadn't been cleaned more than a handful of times.

antique cast iron rim lock

Before going any further, I took a million pictures before and in between removing each of the individual parts (there were 5 total pieces inside the casing). Once everything was removed, I was ready to move on to the cooking.

cleaning antique hardware


Crock pot, water, baking soda, hardware. Cook on low for a whole bunch of hours. I don't have a set time - it depends on how paint caked the hardware is. I've also had good luck using TSP instead of baking soda, and I've heard of people using dish soap with good results as well. So you can pretty much use whatever you have on hand. The water will turn really murky and gross as it cooks. I think it goes without saying that you should use an old crock pot that you will not be cooking food in.


A lot of old cast iron hardware has a powder like coat of black paint that is really hard to remove. Although I let these pieces cook for a lot of hours, I wasn't happy with how clean they were coming, so I decided to let them have a good soak in a chemical stripper. After allowing the chemicals to do their magic, I was rinsing/washing, scrubbing clean with steel wool, rinsing/washing, patting dry. This is an incredibly tedious and dirty process. I paid more attention to the moving parts and the sides of the casing that will be seen, rather than the inside (you can see evidence of that below).

restoring antique cast iron rim lock


restoring antique cast iron rim lock


restoring antique cast iron rim lock

At this point, I stared at and fiddled with this darn thing for probably 20 minutes trying to make it work, until I realized I was missing the mechanism to make the latch spring back into place. It's also missing a similar mechanism for the lock, but since we don't have the key anyway, I'm not concerned with making that functional. I found the piece I had forgot about (the skinny straight piece of metal), and positioned it so that when the doorknob wasn't being turned, it would force the latch back out. The final step before putting the cover back on was to liberally apply some WD40 to keep things moving smooth.

restoring antique cast iron rim lock

All of that to get to this:

Restored Antique Cast Iron Rim Lock Porcelain Knobs



A 113 year old piece of hardware that still works! Although I'm not perfectly happy with it yet. All of the pieces, including those on the inside, need another once over with steel wool. Once any remaining specks of rust (and blackness on the case) are removed, everything is going to get a coat of poly to prevent any further rusting. Of course I'll have to clean all of that WD40 off of everything first, and then reapply it once the poly is dry. So many steps. Worth it? Heck yes.

Update! See this lock re-installed here.


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The Shabby Nest

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Comments (37)

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Looks great! We have some vents we are trying to clean up... I wonder if this same treatment would work on them?
3 replies · active 687 weeks ago
Looks great Ash.
1 reply · active 688 weeks ago
I am so happy you are going to the trouble of cleaning this up. Who else has 113 year old hardware in their house?? So very cool!
My recent post Cedar and Stuff
1 reply · active 688 weeks ago
It's amazing how clean you were able to get the lock! I have never seen a lock like that before, but I love it! It's great that you are trying to keep as many original pieces to the house as you can. I get really disappointed when I see people updating an older home and taking out all the small pieces that gave it character.
1 reply · active 688 weeks ago
They look awesome now! Don't you just love the slow cooker trick? It's amazing.. probably my favourite old house reno task. :)
My recent post Dining Room: Door Painting Continues
3 replies · active 687 weeks ago
I have been meaning to comment on all of your progress. I am impressed at everything you have going on with the bathroom and now working on all the locks. I have never thought of using a crockpot before, but I have used a chemical stripper. My mom soaks corroded metal in olive oil with a lot of sucess. A bit more expensive then baking soda and water though.
My recent post We Must Be Crazy: A tour of Tudor we DID NOT buy
3 replies · active 688 weeks ago
They were quite grimey to begin with but they're definitely coming along great! My aunt's house has those kind of door knobs and I think they are so charming.

PS - your crock pot reminds me of my childhood
1 reply · active 688 weeks ago
How do you get the lock mechanism out of the door frame?
1 reply · active 579 weeks ago
nice
Ohhh....the water has caused rust in the lock. You should buy a new lock which is made of better quality material.
Roetfilter reinigen's avatar

Roetfilter reinigen · 437 weeks ago

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