adelaidegirl
6th September 2012, 03:21 PM
Hello there Woodwork Forum people, I am new to this forum and after reading lots of the links believe that I may be fortunate enough to get some help with my project. Having grown up in Tassie I was at a auction here in Adelaide last week and could not help but bid and win this wardrobe. It was stated as edwardian huon pine and having only briefly cast my eyes on it I took a punt. To possibly own a huon pine wardrobe!
The old shellac is horrible so I have cleaned it off the bottom drawer with metho. This wardrobe has lots of dings and probably needs a sand anyway, but I digress. One the bottom of the drawer it has stamped James Marshall & Co Adelaide - who were furniture makers and importers around 1910. The wood inside of the wardrobe is very pale and untreated. It smells old and musty and of shellac but the wood looks beautiful. I cant smell the Huon pine smell but I haven't sanded it.
So, can anyone tell me
Is it in the realms of possibility that it is Huon pine?
Should I continue with the metho to remove the shellac?
What should I then use on it - I really don't like shellac and would prefer a wax/oil if at all possible.
Does Huon Pine lose it's smell after 100yrs?
Please don't hesitate to burst my balloon of happiness as I paid under $300 for this and I think it is worth it regardless of what wood it is.
Thank you very much for reading this and I would appreciate any comments.
adelaidegirl:roll:
The old shellac is horrible so I have cleaned it off the bottom drawer with metho. This wardrobe has lots of dings and probably needs a sand anyway, but I digress. One the bottom of the drawer it has stamped James Marshall & Co Adelaide - who were furniture makers and importers around 1910. The wood inside of the wardrobe is very pale and untreated. It smells old and musty and of shellac but the wood looks beautiful. I cant smell the Huon pine smell but I haven't sanded it.
So, can anyone tell me
Is it in the realms of possibility that it is Huon pine?
Should I continue with the metho to remove the shellac?
What should I then use on it - I really don't like shellac and would prefer a wax/oil if at all possible.
Does Huon Pine lose it's smell after 100yrs?
Please don't hesitate to burst my balloon of happiness as I paid under $300 for this and I think it is worth it regardless of what wood it is.
Thank you very much for reading this and I would appreciate any comments.
adelaidegirl:roll: