The saw isn't mine, that's off google...it is pretty though, huh. If I find one out picking, Ideally I'd like to find a Stanley Handyman of the right size and type and age to piece appropriate. More likely though this will sell before that point. I have some cast iron legs from a white's treadle base, and some wood that matches up well...So i have been thinking about building a matching table for it.
I like repainting cast iron. It's time intensive and methodically executed. But, I have gotten fairly decent at it. The tricks are to dab on not brush; And to keep dabbing it as it dries with second a dry brush (you stop when passes of pulling the paint up into peaks no longer shows a visible difference in sheen and texture, then let it set). It's really the only way I have found to get that tough, thin, highly specular enamel job on a piece that is so familiar in vintage and antique tools...Two brushes that you use more like chisels and time set aside.
I like to test my paint jobs. I lightly stab them dead on with a flat head screwdriver and at and angle. And also fire a few pennies, dimes, and nickles at it with a rubber band stretched between my thumb and first finger. If I can wipe any marks off with a tongue whetted thumb...good paint job.