View Full Version : Finish for Blackwood coffee table?
Green Woodchips
12th January 2006, 01:17 PM
Hi everyone.
I'm in the process of making a Tassie Blackwood coffee table for some friends (wedding present).
I'm finishing it off with a scraper, so as to get a nice silky finish.
But I'm not much of a hack on which finish to apply to the top. What can you recommend that:
(a) is practical (spill resistant);
(b) gives a smooth satin finish;
(c) is easy for a mug like me to apply?
Also ... the legs and aprons are sassafras. Any thoughts on a good satin finish for those?
Regards,
GW
Wongo
12th January 2006, 01:33 PM
Easy to apply, durable, $29.95 from Bunnings.:)
Green Woodchips
12th January 2006, 01:37 PM
Thanks, Wongo.
Have you used it?
Cheers,
GW
Wongo
12th January 2006, 01:44 PM
Yes I used for my workbench. It was pretty easy and I liked it.
Peter3
31st October 2021, 11:26 AM
I have 2 different tones of Tasmanian Blackwood on my coffee table and TV unit, I want to match TV unit as coffee table is lighter, what can I do? I cant see the product you posted here. Thanks
KeithP
1st November 2021, 10:33 PM
Peter, you are replying to posts from 2006 (see the dates on the posts ).
Regards
Keith
China
1st November 2021, 11:13 PM
Peter3
Rustins Plastic Coating, impervious to just about everything, plus you can finish to whatever gloss level you desire. I also believe a product called Hard Shellac is good for such finishing although I have never used it.
Xanthorrhoeas
3rd November 2021, 07:43 PM
Peter,
Are you saying that you want the two different tones of blackwood to look the same? If you are then you will need to apply stain to the lighter timber - bleaching the darker blackwood is unlikely to be easy.
If you wish to apply a stain, and the items will not be in sunlight, then you can easily use one of the spirit based stains and over-finish with your choice. There is a very wide range of choice for final finish, depending on what you want it to look like. I don't like the polyurethanes, but that's just my choice - they certainly make a tough and long-life finish. Unfortunately, the end-of-life for them is ugly and they have to be chemically or heat stripped. My preference is for shellac and the forums owners sell a hard shellac that is quite water/spill resistant and can easily be stained and refreshed.
I think that the range of tones in blackwood should be celebrated, not stained into non-existence, so please consider that option.
By-the-way, all the oil 'stains' are actually pigments that cloud and hide the colour and figure of the timber. Only the spirit stains and shellac really allow that wonderful transparent view into the beauty of the figure of the timber IMHO.
I hope that this helps
David
Peter3
4th November 2021, 09:11 AM
Thank you all for your input. I am new with woodwork but would like to learn to DIY. So I will have to finely sand it back, then apply stain then shellac. Any suggestion for the type of stain, the darker TV unit is kind of reddish
Peter3
4th November 2021, 09:37 AM
Peter,
Are you saying that you want the two different tones of blackwood to look the same? If you are then you will need to apply stain to the lighter timber - bleaching the darker blackwood is unlikely to be easy.
If you wish to apply a stain, and the items will not be in sunlight, then you can easily use one of the spirit based stains and over-finish with your choice. There is a very wide range of choice for final finish, depending on what you want it to look like. I don't like the polyurethanes, but that's just my choice - they certainly make a tough and long-life finish. Unfortunately, the end-of-life for them is ugly and they have to be chemically or heat stripped. My preference is for shellac and the forums owners sell a hard shellac that is quite water/spill resistant and can easily be stained and refreshed.
I think that the range of tones in blackwood should be celebrated, not stained into non-existence, so please consider that option.
By-the-way, all the oil 'stains' are actually pigments that cloud and hide the colour and figure of the timber. Only the spirit stains and shellac really allow that wonderful transparent view into the beauty of the figure of the timber IMHO.
I hope that this helps
David I would like to stain it with spirit stain and apply the shellac as you suggested. What brand of spirit stains should I buy where can I buy the shellac? Thanks in advance