Pn

Phisherman

27/03/2007 11:57 PM

Shaker-style utility table

I made a Shaker-style utility table with two drawers. It is made from
pine and I turned two birch knobs for it. I used a wood conditioner
and used a honey gel stain--no blotches(!). My question is how to
protect it since it is a softwood. What can be used to make it look
Shaker, yet tough? I will use in a theater room to store remotes and
media. TIA


This topic has 3 replies

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"Andy Dingley"

in reply to Phisherman on 27/03/2007 11:57 PM

28/03/2007 4:06 AM

On 28 Mar, 00:57, Phisherman <[email protected]> wrote:

> What can be used to make it look Shaker, yet tough?

Gel poly. I use some funky UK stuff called "Patina" that's not quite
your usual gel poly. One coat is inadequate, two coats is
hardwearing, three coats looks like plastic.

Hn

Han

in reply to Phisherman on 27/03/2007 11:57 PM

28/03/2007 12:41 AM

Phisherman <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:

> I made a Shaker-style utility table with two drawers. It is made from
> pine and I turned two birch knobs for it. I used a wood conditioner
> and used a honey gel stain--no blotches(!). My question is how to
> protect it since it is a softwood. What can be used to make it look
> Shaker, yet tough? I will use in a theater room to store remotes and
> media. TIA
>
I made a pine blanket chest years ago. I believe I finished it with
sanding sealer or shellac and rather many coats of paste wax, each of which
was rubbed with 0000 steelwool and then rubbed out with a "lambswool" pad.
Lasts fine.


--
Best regards
Han
email address is invalid

Gt

Glenn

in reply to Phisherman on 27/03/2007 11:57 PM

27/03/2007 11:25 PM

Do your final sanding with 400 grit. Use MinWax polyurathane that you
apply with a cloth. Apply the first coat with a brush. Becareful, it
is very trhin and will run if not careful. Scrap off first coat. You
just filled the pores. Apply a second coat with a cloth. Rub down
with a 3M green pad. Apply a third coat. Apply MinWax furniture wax
with 0000 steel wool. Buff with a sheepskin pad in your DeWalt random
orbital sander. (The pads stick on like the sandpaper.) This is the
process I have been using.

On Tue, 27 Mar 2007 23:57:56 GMT, Phisherman <[email protected]> wrote:

>I made a Shaker-style utility table with two drawers. It is made from
>pine and I turned two birch knobs for it. I used a wood conditioner
>and used a honey gel stain--no blotches(!). My question is how to
>protect it since it is a softwood. What can be used to make it look
>Shaker, yet tough? I will use in a theater room to store remotes and
>media. TIA


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