Back to original question:
The question I have concerns the blue ITW caps I have (see pic). Do you think these are the originals? Should I replace them as part of the service?
The blue ITW caps are 100% stock and typical in silverface Fenders. You also see brown caps that are a similar size/shape but different texture. And all those white caps are Mallory electrolytics.
You could consider replacing them, but except for the one on the bias board, I would strongly consider leaving them in place. If you like the current low end of your amp, don't change them. E-lytics dry up over time and lower in value, which reduces bass response when the cathode bypass caps look like a smaller value. But many, many people fight farty bass by trimming the 25uF bypass caps down to around 1-2uF. Your caps (if they've changed value) are probably around 2-8uF, and likely sound pretty good as-is.
I have a SF Deluxe Reverb ... It has been 'Black Faced' at some time in the past ...
The Deluxe didn't change much. Grid resistors for the phase inverter become 330k instead of the blackface's 1M, phase inverter input cap becomes 0.01uF instead of BF's 0.001uF, and there are small caps from the 6V6 grids to ground. So the whole operation is changing 3 parts and removing 2 others. Yeah, there's a rectifier tube change, but as long as you don't burn up your filament winding, you can swap those at will; and the stock 5U4 in a silverface draws more current, so the GZ34 is always safe to install.
I had it serviced about 10 years ago and figure its time for another.
Is it humming? Are pots crackling? Are the tube sockets gripping the tubes so lightly that they're about to fall out? Are the filter caps originasl to the amp?
If you answer no to each of these (and the last one is somewhat conditional on the first question), then I wouldn't do anything except maybe install a new bias cap. I'd probably only do that if I had hum that did not stop when the phase inverter was pulled.
I have 2 amps I built maybe 10 years ago. I don't forsee servicing them for at least another 10 years (one, maybe not for the next 20 years or more, cause the filter caps aren't electrolytic).