just a few points to add;…..
If you use laqueur be absolutely sure that you prep carefully and fully, so no fingerprints etc…..don't use petrol as final wash….don't use brake cleaner either…..Meths is as good as anything after hot detergent etc.
Remember that the silicone polishes such as 'Renaisance Wax' while they work well as specified can be virutally impossible to remove completely if you later wish to either laq or silver/gold plate and can really muck up the job!
If you use laq don't just get the first one you see on the shelf at Halfords…shop around and ALWAYS do a test first on a carefully prepped piece of similar scrap.
Some laq gives excellent results but has some difficult handling features…clockmakers have lists of recipes that go back into the mists of time with weird and wondrful 'pros and cons'..such as the famed 'dragons blood' etc
A very excellent laq that I have found is 'Le Tonkinois' but it has savage cons for the inexperienced….I used this on my first clock and was pleased with the great working characteristics such as superb smooth finish and easy application. However, one week after application the clock developed purple streaks!……I won't describe my anguish! Then I noticed that the parts whxih had been heated to red heat for silver soldering had not streaked…..I now still use this laq but never of parts that I have not annealed/heated.