Thomidog
24th May 2005, 02:03 AM
Okay all you shellackers, please help if you can! I have this lovely old pine table with a thick, dark and quite damaged finish. I think it's black japan but then I wouldn't know how to tell the difference between black japan and simply darkened shellac - does it matter? The table has a range of damage, some appealing and some not so, and I want to try and even out some of the worst dings and unsightly bits while preserving most of the finish. I'm having some success with dabbing diluted black japan over the chips to recolour the wood, but I'm stumped on modify the damage left by removal of old lino... the lino glue has dissolved the surface of the shellac and left patches of criss-crosses with a corresponding light/dark mottling. Needless to say as they're quite textured these patches are dull even when I polish them up. Now shellackers say you can repair shellac... How please? Using metho on a few tiny test patches it's clear it will strip the old finish quite quickly... When shellacking over this I've achieved a result that's a bit better than before, but not great, as you can see the edge of the shellac having gone outside the edge of the really damaged bit and onto a previously fairly good bit.
What's the protocol for doing this kind of thing? Would I better sanding than using metho? How do I get the shellac to blend seamlessly with the previous finish? Is there a method of simply dissolving and redistributing the existing dyestuff on the thing - I had some success doing that with some 1930's chairs once using metho but it isn't working the same on this table. Am I attempting the impossible? :)
What's the protocol for doing this kind of thing? Would I better sanding than using metho? How do I get the shellac to blend seamlessly with the previous finish? Is there a method of simply dissolving and redistributing the existing dyestuff on the thing - I had some success doing that with some 1930's chairs once using metho but it isn't working the same on this table. Am I attempting the impossible? :)