LisaZ
11th March 2012, 10:11 AM
Hi there,
I found this gorgeous little cabinet out on the street the other day, and thinking it was probably pine or perhaps oak under the thick stain, i took to it with a paint stripper (a gentle one, smells of citrus and is supposed to contain no nasties).
Anyway when the colour came off I got a shock - I think the unit's actually a very old red cedar piece. It has this exquisite art deco inlay that was completely hidden by the shellac or whatever it was.
As soon as I realised that (halfway through), i switched to a soft flannel and methylated spirits to remove the rest of the stripper.
But I'm worried about two things:
Will I have damaged the cedar by using stripper on it at all?
What should I finish it with now, especially to preserve the inlay? I have beeswax and Restor-A-Finish, but ideally i'd like something harder, to protect it. I read somewhere that I should avoid normal varnish - is that right?
Any advice will be much appreciated - I really don't want to ruin this piece by making beginners' mistakes, but I AM a beginner!
Thank you heaps in advance :)
I found this gorgeous little cabinet out on the street the other day, and thinking it was probably pine or perhaps oak under the thick stain, i took to it with a paint stripper (a gentle one, smells of citrus and is supposed to contain no nasties).
Anyway when the colour came off I got a shock - I think the unit's actually a very old red cedar piece. It has this exquisite art deco inlay that was completely hidden by the shellac or whatever it was.
As soon as I realised that (halfway through), i switched to a soft flannel and methylated spirits to remove the rest of the stripper.
But I'm worried about two things:
Will I have damaged the cedar by using stripper on it at all?
What should I finish it with now, especially to preserve the inlay? I have beeswax and Restor-A-Finish, but ideally i'd like something harder, to protect it. I read somewhere that I should avoid normal varnish - is that right?
Any advice will be much appreciated - I really don't want to ruin this piece by making beginners' mistakes, but I AM a beginner!
Thank you heaps in advance :)