Sam Bridgham
8th March 2005, 06:31 PM
Hi folks
I'm in deep with a silky oak project. I'm nearly certain the species is grevillea robusta, which means it is softer than teak and light pink in its unfinished form. I've had it sanded down to 400 and found that steel wool leaves it grubby in spots, though it brings the shine up to about where I'd like it. I've applied boiled linseed oil and then beeswax, but still am not satisfied that the figure is as high as I can get it.
Any practical advice on this? Is there a stain that would work well with linseed? How have people dealt with the softness?
Sam
I'm in deep with a silky oak project. I'm nearly certain the species is grevillea robusta, which means it is softer than teak and light pink in its unfinished form. I've had it sanded down to 400 and found that steel wool leaves it grubby in spots, though it brings the shine up to about where I'd like it. I've applied boiled linseed oil and then beeswax, but still am not satisfied that the figure is as high as I can get it.
Any practical advice on this? Is there a stain that would work well with linseed? How have people dealt with the softness?
Sam