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Results 1 to 7 of 7
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10th August 2018, 10:07 AM #1
Finishing Victorian Ash cutting boards
I was given some Victorian Ash cutting boards made up of laminated strips that I had to finish off. I sanded them out to 300 and the finished off with Ubeaut food safe oil rubbed in. I only did one and have noticed that after one use and a wash down with warm water that the surface grain now stands up. Before I go any further with the others I need advice on what to do with the first one to fix it and how best to handle the others.
Thanks
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10th August 2018, 02:46 PM #2
After sanding to 300grit, you should have wet down the boards with water and then lightly sanded it smooth again after it had dried. You can still do it now even though you have oiled one of the boards, it will just be more difficult to sand but not impossible or overly time consuming.
Sanding, then wetting, then sanding again is good practice for finishing wooden items in general regardless of whether you are oiling, lacquering, shellacing, varnishing etc.
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11th August 2018, 09:10 AM #3
Thanks for the reply Kuffy I'll give that a go.
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12th August 2018, 01:24 PM #4
Because sand papers always scuff up a wood surface, I suggest that you use a cabinet scraper.
The fresh, square edge (+/- a burr) will actually cut the "fuzzies" clean off.
I make my own scrapers from lumber-banding steel strapping.
First used, all I could see was wood dust. With a magnifying glass, they were exquisite, curly shavings.
Not expensive to buy, should you go that way.
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12th August 2018, 05:24 PM #5
How do you hold the steel strapping for use as a scraper? The stuff we use at work is 3/4" wide, but I throw a fair few meters of 5/8" in the bin which was used by another company which we order components from.
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13th August 2018, 03:54 AM #6
I cut the strapping into 3" pieces with WISS aircraft metal shears.
I do my best to square off one edge, clamped in a vise.
Wrap some masking tape to mark the dull edge to hold.
True, they are a little awkward to hold.
I'd like to find bigger pieces of steel.
For the price, I might as well buy some!
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15th August 2018, 06:58 AM #7
also try not to dunk the board in water, plus leave more oil on to soak longer. I took our board over to a friends place to showcase my work (get a few orders etc) and everyone was suitably impressed but caught our friend just about to submerge the board in the sink before I stopped him.
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