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Thread: Finishing First tassie Oak Box
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3rd November 2007, 06:48 PM #1Member
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Finishing First tassie Oak Box
After spending a couple of days making my first box I want to make sure the finishing stage goes to plan. I am trying to achieve a bit more richness in the fairly bland grain of the tassie oak with a an appealing tactile lustre. Next time I will use more exotic timber!
Yep I've read quite a few threads on this but want to try the following:
1. Minwax Wipe on poly (satin) (2 coats) - to darken the wood slightly
light sanding
2. UBeaut Whie Shellac (2 coats) - I believe some magic occurs!
light sanding
3. UBeaut trad wax - applied as per Neil's instructions
I confess I'm a complete novice having not previously used Shellac or anything other than Minwax- will this combination work OK??
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3rd November 2007, 07:16 PM #2
I vote 2. after sanding to 1200 and as many coats as you think to get the depth you like and then some trad wax. m2cw
Cheers MikeMike
"Working to a rigidly defined method of doubt and uncertainty"
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3rd November 2007, 07:30 PM #3Senior Member
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Gidday,
I might be wrong, but isn't miniwax pretty much designed to be an all-in-one? I'm not sure how adding 2 coats of shellac and a wax on top would help.
Why not skip (1) and just do (2) and (3)? (which, having re-read it, is pretty much what Mike suggested as well).
Your best bet is probably to grab an offcut and do a test run from go to woe with your plan, and see if you like the finished product.
Good luck!
Cheerio,
sCORCHYes - I'm a lawyer.
No - I won't bill you for reading this.
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3rd November 2007, 07:40 PM #4GOLD MEMBER
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I'm with sCORCH. Forget doing no. 1. Timber will darken with age. I prefer the lighter colour and you are getting that with no. 2 and 3.
Carry Pine
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3rd November 2007, 08:16 PM #5Happy Feet
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we have concensus dont use polly!
shellac and wax is the way to go,
if you want to deepen the tone without radically changing the colour, try wiping on a solution of plain water and washing soda although im not sure how much tannin there is in tassie oak to activate this
dont forget to wash it off again
astrid
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3rd November 2007, 08:25 PM #6Senior Member
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Coatings should be judged by their usage..
Poly, is a much more durable and chemical resistant coating then Shellac.
Will the pieces be handled and used a lot, or will they remain on a shelf, judge the coatings by the differences of how much or how little the pieces will be used.
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3rd November 2007, 11:45 PM #7New Member
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Now correct me if I am wrong but what yous is sayin Mac is that my 19th century, French polished, Australian Cedar credenza which is in impeccable condition, has never been restored and has outlasted 7 generations of Kanoly's would have been better off had been coated with polyurethane than with the shellac that has protected it since 1862.
I think not pizano. Yous is talkin through your hat. Polyurethane hasn't been around for very long in the scheme of tings and I can not recall seeing a good piece of furniture finished with it that has not crazed, blistered, discolored, pealed, chipped flaked or in some other way failed over a period of time. Especially in Australia. I can not recall seeing it used as an archive finish or on really fine furniture and had it been I am sure the owner would at some time regret their decision to use it.
Shellac is easy to repair. Polyurethane is God awful hard to repair. Shellac looks beautiful, polyurethane looks ordinary even when done extremely well.
Everyone in my family was taught to respect furniture, amongst other things and not to treat it like rubbish so why would it need to have a high chemical resistance. Even if it was used for storing your Mary Jane and chemical substances a box finished with shellac should be more than adequate so long as it is not cleaned with paint stripper or something equally ridiculous.
Mr Warmtone if yous want a good finish do what your peers suggest and use the shellac followed by wax and if you want to darken the wood a little use ordinary brown shellac to start with this will give it a rich honey tone.
Don KDere aint no such ting as da mafia.
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4th November 2007, 12:00 AM #8Happy Feet
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astrid
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4th November 2007, 12:53 AM #9Senior Member
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Shellac has its Pros & Cons...
Let me start by saying, don't compare the 2 coatings in time, Polyurethane is less then 75 years old.
If shellac is the greatest finish in the world, then why don't most furniture manufacturers use it?
Yes, Shellac is very easy coating to repair, that's because it so soft and so easy to damage, Shellac also has the lowest pencil hardness rating. it also has the lowest heat and alcoho resistancel, it is a good thing that its an" easy coating to repair."
If you thought out my answer to the posters question, and did not run your salty mouth like you did, the guy was making a "box" not a Louie from London the 14th.
Shellac, has it place in the scheme of coating, I personally would rather spray a Nitrocelluse Lacquer that is chemical restistant, and it is much more durable then Shellac. Nitrocellulose has been the workhouse coating since the 30's, it pushed out Shellac and Varnish, which then was use mainly for wooden coaches.
I hear that Shellac is a "labor of love" it would have to be with all the time and work involve in getting a very fine finish. As I said, it has its place in finishing, but so does many other coatings.
Is your automobile finished in Shellac, No its not, there are other coatings that have bether strengths, you should select the coating that is best for each type of work, not because your a lover of SHELLAC !Last edited by MacS; 4th November 2007 at 12:55 AM. Reason: Text
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4th November 2007, 09:08 AM #10
Funny how seemingly every thread about finishing these days seems to turn in to a clash of egos
This forum is supposed to be about giving (and receiving) advice, not to parade your ego, can we play nice please?
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4th November 2007, 09:11 AM #11
(2) followed by (3), perhaps with an intermediate step of:
(2.5) buff with Ubeaut EEE.Those are my principles, and if you don't like them . . . well, I have others.
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4th November 2007, 09:43 AM #12
Warm tone, I think you're going to have to make another three boxes and finish one in minwax, one in shellac, one in wax and the other in nitro just to keep us all feeling happy, warm, comfortable and loved (joking)
The problem is that everyone here is right, given how they imagine how the finished item should look and what its final use is.
They are all good finishes for particular purposes, I'd say Scorch is on the money with his advice to do some test pieces and YOU decide what suits you based on the look, feel and final use.
ps make it four extra boxes, my old high school wood working teacher used to love to wire brush & flame scorch a finished piece and then varnish it (yuk!), he might be reading this forum
Ian
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4th November 2007, 09:55 AM #13Senior Member
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This was my suggestion, I never knocked Shellac, I only made a comparision.
"Poly, is a much more durable and chemical resistant coating then Shellac.
Will the pieces be handled and used a lot, or will they remain on a shelf, judge the coatings by the differences of how much or how little the pieces will be used."
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4th November 2007, 10:04 AM #14
I vote #1 MacS.
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.
Albert Einstein
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4th November 2007, 10:35 AM #15
Me too! because we should all keep our friends close but our faux's even closer.
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