aldav
30th May 2020, 07:07 PM
I'm making a box out of Surian Cedar (Toona Calantas), which is close to receiving the final finish. It's got a coat of Feast Watson Proofclear on it (a metho based sanding sealer), I'm not really happy with the colour but I should be able to address this with a Prooftint stain, which is also metho based. What I'm really concerned about is that I was planning to use an oil finish (Feast Watson Fine Buffing Oil) and even after the sealer and light sanding to 600 grit the timber is still shedding some long fibres, particularly on the edges if they're 'eased' with 2 light passes of the 600 grit paper. The grain is also very open and some areas look like they could really do with some grain filling sanding sealer. I can't use this of course because you can't put oil finishes over it?
This is the first time I've used this timber, when machining it I found some pieces to be very 'woolly' off the saw and when sanding. It's really doing my head in, never struck anything quite as bad as it before.
Should I persevere with the oil finish and just do as many coats as needed to get an acceptable finish? Or should I be using the grain filling sealer and spraying with a clear topcoat? If so which one? I understand that some of the automotive finishes are very good but I only have very basic spray gear.
HELP!!!
This is the first time I've used this timber, when machining it I found some pieces to be very 'woolly' off the saw and when sanding. It's really doing my head in, never struck anything quite as bad as it before.
Should I persevere with the oil finish and just do as many coats as needed to get an acceptable finish? Or should I be using the grain filling sealer and spraying with a clear topcoat? If so which one? I understand that some of the automotive finishes are very good but I only have very basic spray gear.
HELP!!!