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3rd February 2006, 06:36 AM #1Senior Member
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Question regarding Japanning recipe
Hello All,
I have an American recipe for Japanning, and it specifies:
Boiled Linseed oil
Turpentine
Powdered Asphaltum
Rosin
I have managed to source both the asphaltum and rosin, but am uncertain exactly what he may mean WRT to turpentine. Would this mean mineral turps?
This may seem like a particularly dumb question, but often there is common names in the US which are different to here, for example Gum Turpentine.... could this be used?
Appreciate your help,
Anthony
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3rd February 2006, 08:18 AM #2SENIOR MEMBER
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first of all what are you using this for ?
Hurry, slowly
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3rd February 2006, 08:24 AM #3
Turpentine in US means pure turpentine not mineral turps which is known there as mineral spirits and a dozen other names that mean different things here.
Why not just buy a tin of Feast Watsons Blaxk Japan. Much easier probably cheaper in the long run and will work a hell of a lot better.
Cheers - Neil
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3rd February 2006, 08:33 AM #4
I have the same recipe in my 1913 American Scientific formula book. It was an old recipe then, and turpentine as distilled from pine trees would have been the most common widely available solvent.
Boiled Linseed oil in this case would have been oil that had been boiled to promote hardening. The modern stuff uses heavy metal dryers. I don't know if any of this matters.
Just use BLO and mineral turps, its all just a carrier and binder for the asphaultum anyway.
I think art stores carry a real boiled linseed oil under the name 'stand oil'.
An art store clerk told me that, I have not confirmed it.
Greg
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3rd February 2006, 11:17 AM #5Originally Posted by ubeaut
CheersIf you never made a mistake, you never made anything!
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3rd February 2006, 07:09 PM #6SENIOR MEMBER
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tar and turps, that's it, or use feast watson black japan as mentioned above, this stuff dries a lot faster then the home made stuff too...
la HHurry, slowly
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3rd February 2006, 07:55 PM #7Originally Posted by ubeaut
Also, beware of any finish you put on top - read the labels! as some may dissolve the underlying colouring and leave a RRM (right royal mess). I know. Been there :mad:
Cheers!
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3rd February 2006, 07:56 PM #8Originally Posted by Shedhand
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4th February 2006, 12:32 AM #9SENIOR MEMBER
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....not that dark, yeh right...i can get the same black finish that you see on chinese furniture using black japan on any timber..
...and yes you got to seal it with shelac or you'll be sorry...
Auld ...i feel ya mate, black japan could well and truely be the black curse, and a black hole of extreme fustration, been there too...
but been using it a long time now though, and it's the bestHurry, slowly
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4th February 2006, 07:38 AM #10Senior Member
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The recipe is for jappaning an old plane
Thanks all for the responses. Yes, I should have mentioned I have a sad old plane that I was going to put some new japanning on when I restored it.
I know I can buy a ready made product, but isn't the reason we are all here is to have a go at making stuff our selves? Half the fun is tinkering, right??
Thanks again,
Anthony
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4th February 2006, 11:05 AM #11SENIOR MEMBER
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crickey ,here i am raving on about wood finishes and you want to spruce up a hand plane...fair enough...this may help , http://www.cranialstorage.com/wood/html/japanning.html
la HHurry, slowly
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4th February 2006, 12:13 PM #12Senior Member
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Good link, thanks La H!
Thanks for that I will have a look.
Anthony
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6th February 2006, 11:41 PM #13
I had a go at some japan a while ago & I used the formular from one of the us sites
My variation was to use shelac as the rosin and gp thinner as the solvent
I tried some other combinations to but
equal parts asphaltum & shelac and thinner in stead of turps worked very well.
the shelac makes the end product go off harder and less likely to scratch and chip.
its crude chemistry but i recon the following.
The solvent is unimportant as long as all the other ingredients disolve in it and it evaporates suitably in the drying process.
the asphaltum provides resins and most of the colour
the shelac provides stronger resins and some gloss
the linseed oil I recon is a plasticiser as well as a resin when polimerised
the amount the article is heated I dont recon boiled or raw will make any diff.
I don't think proportions are particularly important in getting a sucessfull finish but fine tuning will probably get a differing end "look"
For some insight get some pieces of cleen scrap steel and coat them all in the various ingredients then bake ( you will have to disolve the asphaltum)
cheersAny thing with sharp teeth eats meat.
Most powertools have sharp teeth.
People are made of meat.
Abrasives can be just as dangerous as a blade.....and 10 times more painfull.
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7th February 2006, 07:46 AM #14SENIOR MEMBER
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sounds like this might be good for wood finishing too, i was using feast watson black japan, then i started making my own 'tar and turps, as diirected to me by an antiques restorer, but i find it takes to long to cure, about 4 days, maybe your version with the shelac will make it quick drying...
Hurry, slowly
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10th February 2006, 11:45 AM #15
My recipie would not be good for timber because it dosn't seem to go off at all till you bake it.
It dries a bit till it's tacky & gooy, then you bake it. the thinnner makes it dry up reasoably quick though.
And it is a dirty brown till baked.
cheersAny thing with sharp teeth eats meat.
Most powertools have sharp teeth.
People are made of meat.
Abrasives can be just as dangerous as a blade.....and 10 times more painfull.
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