Cc

"CraigT"

29/05/2008 11:27 AM

What finish for a walnut bracelet?

I just finished carving my wife a bracelet out of some walnut I had laying
around. Now it's time to throw on some finish and I'm not sure what to do.
I'm sure this thing will take a ton of abuse, but I can't say I'd want to it
to look like I dipped it in plastic.

Recommendations?


This topic has 7 replies

rr

randyswoodshoop

in reply to "CraigT" on 29/05/2008 11:27 AM

29/05/2008 11:50 AM

On May 29, 10:27=A0am, "CraigT" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I just finished carving my wife a bracelet out of some walnut I had laying=

> around. Now it's time to throw on some finish and I'm not sure what to do.=

> I'm sure this thing will take a ton of abuse, but I can't say I'd want to =
it
> to look like I dipped it in plastic.
>
> Recommendations?

I think on a bracelet, I would use something like a polyurethane
finish..once if it dry they will be no bleed off of worry of rub off
finish on the skin and there should not be any skin irratation with
it.

Randy
http://nokeswoodworks.com

cc

charlieb

in reply to "CraigT" on 29/05/2008 11:27 AM

30/05/2008 12:31 PM

CraigT wrote:
>
> I just finished carving my wife a bracelet out of some walnut I had laying
> around. Now it's time to throw on some finish and I'm not sure what to do.
> I'm sure this thing will take a ton of abuse, but I can't say I'd want to it
> to look like I dipped it in plastic.
>
> Recommendations?

Uh - walnut oil?

cc

charlieb

in reply to "CraigT" on 29/05/2008 11:27 AM

30/05/2008 2:04 PM

Fred the Red Shirt wrote:

> Walnut is a wood noted for provoking allergic reactions.
> For that reason I would suggest a finish that would effectively
> seal it, preferably one that is itself as hypoallegenic as
> possible,.

Shellac maybe? Easy to renew the finish since a new
coat dissolves the surface of the last coat, forming
a single layer coating - and you can EAT IT - FDA says
so.

GR

Gerald Ross

in reply to "CraigT" on 29/05/2008 11:27 AM

29/05/2008 3:44 PM

CraigT wrote:
> I just finished carving my wife a bracelet out of some walnut I had laying
> around. Now it's time to throw on some finish and I'm not sure what to do.
> I'm sure this thing will take a ton of abuse, but I can't say I'd want to it
> to look like I dipped it in plastic.
>
> Recommendations?
>
>
I use two coats of tung oil on my wooden bracelets, then wax.

--
Gerald Ross
Cochran, GA

Snow and adolescence are the only
problems that go away if ignored long
enough.



nn

in reply to "CraigT" on 29/05/2008 11:27 AM

30/05/2008 1:58 PM

On May 29, 1:50 pm, randyswoodshoop <[email protected]> wrote:


> I think on a bracelet, I would use something like a polyurethane
> finish..once if it dry they will be no bleed off of worry of rub off
> finish on the skin and there should not be any skin irratation with

I am with you 100%.

I think a water resistive finish is a must. When a little sweat
(sorry, "glow") hits the bracelet and penetrates a wax finish, the
oils in the walnut will come out. And it wouldn't be too great to
have that bracelet turn someone's arm purple. Not good at all.

Finish with poly, and steel wood to the proper sheen. I would think
since it is only a bracelet, you don't have to put more than a couple
of coats on it. I would just buy a rattle can and be done with it.

Robert

Ft

Fred the Red Shirt

in reply to "CraigT" on 29/05/2008 11:27 AM

30/05/2008 1:48 PM

On May 29, 11:27 am, "CraigT" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I just finished carving my wife a bracelet out of some walnut I had laying
> around. Now it's time to throw on some finish and I'm not sure what to do.
> I'm sure this thing will take a ton of abuse, but I can't say I'd want to it
> to look like I dipped it in plastic.
>
> Recommendations?

Walnut is a wood noted for provoking allergic reactions.
For that reason I would suggest a finish that would effectively
seal it, preferably one that is itself as hypoallegenic as
possible,.

--

FF

SL

"Steve Lusardi"

in reply to "CraigT" on 29/05/2008 11:27 AM

29/05/2008 5:46 PM

Wax... just like Lignum Vitae finishing. Johnson's Floor Wax.... multiple
coats across many days. Wait at least 24 hrs between coats. Use steel wool
to prepare for the first 3 coats, then cotton rags after. It will last a
life-time and easy to touch up when dinged.
Steve

"CraigT" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I just finished carving my wife a bracelet out of some walnut I had laying
>around. Now it's time to throw on some finish and I'm not sure what to do.
>I'm sure this thing will take a ton of abuse, but I can't say I'd want to
>it to look like I dipped it in plastic.
>
> Recommendations?
>


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