Back to the black coating - I finally had to take them down to the restoration shop that was doing the bodywork on my car, and borrow their bead-blaster to get that all that stuff off. I then tried brushing some gun blue on them to darken them up a little. They looked great for about 15 minutes, and then started to flash rust rather badly!
So I cleaned off the rust with some more Evaporust, and tried the gun blue again - but this time I hit them with some WD40 almost immediately after the gun blue, and they stayed a nice dark metal color without any rusting...
I then coated all sides of each leaf with Rust Prevention Magic (RPM) and took them to a spring shop to have the correct circle hole clamps, front bushings, and insulators installed...
After that, I cleaned the RPM off of the rear portions of the bottom leaves so I could apply my green and white paint markings (2018 update: the paint markings should be green and silver). I know, they aren’t as “sloppy” as the original Ford markings, but I like them anyway. After the paint markings dried, I re-coated the bottom leaves with RPM and took them to the restoration shop for re-installation on the car...
So how do they perform? I thought they were perhaps a tad high when first installed, but after putting the spare tire in the trunk, adding a full tank of gas, and driving the car for about 800 miles, I think the springs have settled nicely, and the stance of the car looks pretty good now - and so far I have not seen any rust on the springs either (although I must admit that the car has never been driven on wet roads - yet)...
Hope this helps!