Nokinian
15th May 2014, 08:48 PM
I am a novice who could do with a little guidance on the use of and/or types of tung oil to use.
I have some lovely 32mm thick blackbutt "rustic" grade boards, 275mm wide. I want to make stair treads out of them and am keen on tung oil. I have bought some Feast Watson Tung Oil. The label also says "traditional timber oil penetrating tung oil".
I was hoping for a satin type finish and I have read here that the finish can be "burnished". When I apply the oil with a cloth the oil soaks right into the timber, forever leaving it dry and "hungry' looking, regardless of many "coats" I apply. Then, I decided to give it a liberal soaking with a brush. The surface glistens, of course (and looks temporarily stunning!) but when I return 24 hours later it is still wet. I then wipe off the excess...and it goes back to looking dry.
Can anyone suggest the best way of applying tung oil to Australian hardwoods? The online resources (and some from this forum) seem to suggest that if you mop 2 coats on it comes up looking more or less like a polished floor.
Many thanks.
I have some lovely 32mm thick blackbutt "rustic" grade boards, 275mm wide. I want to make stair treads out of them and am keen on tung oil. I have bought some Feast Watson Tung Oil. The label also says "traditional timber oil penetrating tung oil".
I was hoping for a satin type finish and I have read here that the finish can be "burnished". When I apply the oil with a cloth the oil soaks right into the timber, forever leaving it dry and "hungry' looking, regardless of many "coats" I apply. Then, I decided to give it a liberal soaking with a brush. The surface glistens, of course (and looks temporarily stunning!) but when I return 24 hours later it is still wet. I then wipe off the excess...and it goes back to looking dry.
Can anyone suggest the best way of applying tung oil to Australian hardwoods? The online resources (and some from this forum) seem to suggest that if you mop 2 coats on it comes up looking more or less like a polished floor.
Many thanks.