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
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.
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
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