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  1. #1
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    Nov 2012
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    Default French Polishing versus fine sanding shellac? which is glossier?

    Hi there everyone,
    After playing around with some micromesh in grits running up to 12,000 to sand some pieces of rosewood that i had put a few coats of shellac on to get some idea of what they'd look like finished, i've started to wonder ...

    Just how glossy + deep of a finish is a true french polish compared to a shellac finish that's been sanded up through the really fine grades?

    I can see myself clearly from a good 3 metres away in the shellaced pieces that i sanded with 12,000 grit micromesh, and though there is a very slight haze on them, i'm pretty sure i could have gotten rid of it had i filled all the pores to start with and wet sanded instead of the fairly ragged quick few coats i slapped on the pieces before sanding them dry.

    Ideally i'd like the deepest and highest gloss finish i can possibly get with shellac, and as such, am curious to hear what other people on here think.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2001
    Location
    Langwarrin, Victoria, Australia
    Age
    56
    Posts
    31

    Default

    I am a bit of a mug trying French polishing at the moment on some Sydney blue gum cabinets.

    While I can NOT profess to be an expert, with each piece I feel I am getting better.

    Here is a recent image



    As for comparison, I don't think I can provide one, but I do like the results of the French polishing a lot. Very warm pleasant finish.

    To me, one of the keys is surface prep. If you don't remove every single blemish, they will stand out like dogs proverbials on a mouse.

    My early pieces were sanded, but machining marks that I couldn't see still became evident once the polish layered up.

    My later pieces were hit with a smoothing plane, in some cases a cabinet scraper, then grain filled, sanding sealer, rubbed back with 600 wet and dry, then polished, then EEE.
    Glenn Visca

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Albury Well Just Outside
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    2,966

    Default

    Now this is just my understanding(best guess) is french polishing can bring out Shellac to a mirror finish. I am not sure on what results can be achieved with fine sanding Shellac.

    If you put enough layers on can you cut and polish it with the stuff used on cars? Will the Shellac be hard enough to be cut and polished?

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Belgrave, Victoria, Australia
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    Default

    Sorry its taken so long to update this thread, school's been nuts for the last few weeks.
    Anyway, i did another little sample piece today, sanding back 5 quickly brushed on coats of blonde shellac, up to 12,000 grit. The results aren't too bad, but i definitely needed a much thicker layer of shellac to start with, as i fairly quickly managed to sand through it in a few patches like an idiot while i was leveling the surface.

    I've also ordered some more abrasives up to 100,000 grit, so once those get here i'll give them a shot to see how much better they can get things looking. The only real issue i'm having with the 12,000 grit is that its leaving me with a very fine haze of scratches, so i'm hoping taking it further up through the next levels of abrasives will help to reduce those to give me a perfect finish.

    I've not really seen a really perfect french polish in person to know how high the gloss is or how clear and haze free the finish looks, so at the moment i'm basing my benchmarks on internet pictures and a bit of imagination/am building up my expectations to the point of the impossible.

    Here's my test piece sanded to 12,000 grit. In the second photo you can see the dull spots...evidence of botched sanding results from going through my finish
    The last two shots show both the really dull crappy areas (mainly at the top to about halfway down) where i sanded through the finish, as well as the slight haziness i was talking about in the spots were the finish remains.

    SAM_2289.jpgSAM_2292.jpgSAM_2310.jpgSAM_2298.jpgSAM_2305.jpg

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2001
    Location
    Langwarrin, Victoria, Australia
    Age
    56
    Posts
    31

    Default

    Have you tried EEE ultrashine ? It contains fine abrasive and removes the "plastic" shine.

    I reiterate ... I ain't no expert.
    Glenn Visca

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Brisbane
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    596

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    You may have missed the purpose of French Polish. The real purpose of French polish is to show the beauty of the depth of figure in the timber with a really transparent finish that "looks into" the timber. A super high gloss is the opposite of that. If you can see yourself reflected rather than the timber then you have failed IMHO. That is a plastic finish. Buy isothane or polyurethane and be done.


    Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Belgrave, Victoria, Australia
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    Quote Originally Posted by Xanthorrhoeas View Post
    You may have missed the purpose of French Polish. The real purpose of French polish is to show the beauty of the depth of figure in the timber with a really transparent finish that "looks into" the timber. A super high gloss is the opposite of that. If you can see yourself reflected rather than the timber then you have failed IMHO. That is a plastic finish. Buy isothane or polyurethane and be done.


    Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
    I believe i have missed the purpose of it then...if only because i can't see any difference between abrading shellac to a high gloss versus doing a true french polish?
    Both bring shellac up to a high gloss? Both create a fairly thin finish that highlights the wood beneath, and both, as far as i've seen allow you to more or less see yourself in the finish?

    Regardless of whether i have truly failed or not, i'll persist with trying to get as glassy a finish with shellac as possible, simply because its the aesthetic i'm fond of, and after a decade or so of wear and use, dare i say it'll tone down quite a bit anyway.

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