surfdabbler
16th July 2012, 10:24 PM
I'm having a problem with the finish of my danish oil. I've just put on the 3rd coat, and it seems to be less shiny than after the 2nd coat.
Here's my process...
I have a camphor slab desktop, roughly 2400 x 750, and a 2nd piece 2400 x 250 for a shelf. I sanded both to 400 grit, orbital on the top surface, and hand sanded the edges.
Then Danish Oil. First night wiped down the wood with a cloth, then I wiped on the danish oil, and kept an eye on it for 30 minutes, touching up the dry areas with more oil to cover it all nicely before wiping off with a clean cloth. Next night, I dusted off the surface and wiped in on the 2nd coat of oil, left for 30 minites and wiped off again.
3rd night I dusted off again, wiped on the oil, wet-sanded with 600 grit, by hand with a sanding block with the grain (took me most of the half hour - wet sanding the oil is like swimming in molasses!), and then wiped it off.
It seems to me that the end result has less lustre and more 'dead' spots than it did after the 2nd coat. It's gone backwards. :(
Now, I actually started with the shelf one day later, so it's one coat behind, and looks better. The grain is more apparent on the shelf, so I guess the wet-sanding has had some positive effect there, and the desk feels smoother to the touch, but the overall result is less pleasing, having lost some of it's beautiful lustre.
I had a theory that perhaps some tiny wood dust was now caught in the top of the finish, and was reducing the surface shine, and gave parts of it a quick wipe-on-wipe-off treatment with a bit more oil, but no real change.
So, now I would like to bring it back to life. Can I dry-sand tomorrow with the orbital at 400 grit again, and put on another coat of oil? Should I just give it another coat without sanding?
When I do the shelf, should I dry sand to 600 before the oil, instead of doing it with the oil?
Any suggestions?
Here's my process...
I have a camphor slab desktop, roughly 2400 x 750, and a 2nd piece 2400 x 250 for a shelf. I sanded both to 400 grit, orbital on the top surface, and hand sanded the edges.
Then Danish Oil. First night wiped down the wood with a cloth, then I wiped on the danish oil, and kept an eye on it for 30 minutes, touching up the dry areas with more oil to cover it all nicely before wiping off with a clean cloth. Next night, I dusted off the surface and wiped in on the 2nd coat of oil, left for 30 minites and wiped off again.
3rd night I dusted off again, wiped on the oil, wet-sanded with 600 grit, by hand with a sanding block with the grain (took me most of the half hour - wet sanding the oil is like swimming in molasses!), and then wiped it off.
It seems to me that the end result has less lustre and more 'dead' spots than it did after the 2nd coat. It's gone backwards. :(
Now, I actually started with the shelf one day later, so it's one coat behind, and looks better. The grain is more apparent on the shelf, so I guess the wet-sanding has had some positive effect there, and the desk feels smoother to the touch, but the overall result is less pleasing, having lost some of it's beautiful lustre.
I had a theory that perhaps some tiny wood dust was now caught in the top of the finish, and was reducing the surface shine, and gave parts of it a quick wipe-on-wipe-off treatment with a bit more oil, but no real change.
So, now I would like to bring it back to life. Can I dry-sand tomorrow with the orbital at 400 grit again, and put on another coat of oil? Should I just give it another coat without sanding?
When I do the shelf, should I dry sand to 600 before the oil, instead of doing it with the oil?
Any suggestions?