JK

"Jay Kaner"

23/09/2004 11:12 PM

Hello Group. Wood finishing advice needed.

I am restoring an old 1970's Italian rocket shaped pepper mill. It's a
design classic and well worthy of been restored.

The main body has been turned from a solid piece of Teak. I have sanded it
down, using wire wool starting from course, then medium then fine and it's
come up lovely.

What I'd like to know now is...How do I get the best finish for it? What's
the best way to bring out the woods natural beauty and show off the grain?
Do I varnish it? Or do I oil it? Or is there another way to go about it?

I'd appreciate any advice.




This topic has 2 replies

JK

"Jay Kaner"

in reply to "Jay Kaner" on 23/09/2004 11:12 PM

24/09/2004 12:27 AM


"Andy Dingley" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Thu, 23 Sep 2004 23:12:13 +0100, "Jay Kaner" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >What I'd like to know now is...How do I get the best finish for it?
>
> Put a really good sanded finish on it before applying anything. Wire
> wool if you like, but try to finish through the full range of grits
> right to 0000. Personally I prefer the plastic web abrasives like 3M
> or Webrax, especially the really fine grey pads.
>
> Then oil it. You can use any modern finishing oil (it'll be marked as
> safe for food use) or many people prefer to finish "food" items with
> plain mineral oil form a drugstore ("liquid paraffin" in the UK). Use
> a tiny amount on a paper towel, because teak is already an oily wood
> and this type of oil needs to soak in, not cure on the surface.

Right. That's excellent. Thank you very much for the advice. I shall get
myself down to a hardware shop and get everything I need. I've got this
far, I might as well make the best job of it and buy the finer sanding
grades.

Once again...Cheers for that.

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to "Jay Kaner" on 23/09/2004 11:12 PM

23/09/2004 11:56 PM

On Thu, 23 Sep 2004 23:12:13 +0100, "Jay Kaner" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>What I'd like to know now is...How do I get the best finish for it?

Put a really good sanded finish on it before applying anything. Wire
wool if you like, but try to finish through the full range of grits
right to 0000. Personally I prefer the plastic web abrasives like 3M
or Webrax, especially the really fine grey pads.

Then oil it. You can use any modern finishing oil (it'll be marked as
safe for food use) or many people prefer to finish "food" items with
plain mineral oil form a drugstore ("liquid paraffin" in the UK). Use
a tiny amount on a paper towel, because teak is already an oily wood
and this type of oil needs to soak in, not cure on the surface.

--
Smert' spamionam


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