CS

"C & S"

18/04/2005 6:23 AM

splotchy cherry

Picture posted to ABPF.

I know that cherry has a tendency to be blotchy because of its uneven
density. I recently made a cofee table, finished with tung then waterlox
that still displayed some splotchyness in the more flatsawn pieces.

O have a new project going and hoped to avoid that issue by selecting
riftsawn stock. No such luck. I did a test with denatured alcohol and these
are the results. This top was glued up from 4 pieces from the same board.
From left to right, 2 and 4 are splotchy.

Will a spit coat of shellac eliminate the splotchies? Why would shellac not
splotch like any other finish?

Test on scrap does not work well here as the problem is inconsistency within
the same board.

Help.

-Steve


This topic has 1 replies

JC

"James \"Cubby\" Culbertson"

in reply to "C & S" on 18/04/2005 6:23 AM

18/04/2005 8:59 AM

Here's how I finish Cherry with little or no blotchiness.

I hit it with an oil (watco, linseed, tung, whatever) but use very little
oil.
I don't flood the surface. It's something like a thimble worth of oil for
every
square foot (according to Jeff Jewitt I think). I rub this on and let it
completely
dry. Then I hit it with shellac after that. You could go over the oil
with any
compatible finish you prefer after that as long as it's not going to
penetrate (ie.
lacquer, shellac, varnish, etc...).

Basically the oil is just enough to pop the grain but not highlight the
blotchiness.
I prefer to use shellac most times after that when I'm working with Cherry.
Shellac is more of a top coat finish (ie. doesn't penetrate very much).

This is an age old question and you'll find there are a million different
answers.
Do a google search for "finish Cherry" and you'll be pretty busy!
Cheers,
cc

"C & S" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Picture posted to ABPF.
>
> I know that cherry has a tendency to be blotchy because of its uneven
> density. I recently made a cofee table, finished with tung then waterlox
> that still displayed some splotchyness in the more flatsawn pieces.
>
> O have a new project going and hoped to avoid that issue by selecting
> riftsawn stock. No such luck. I did a test with denatured alcohol and
> these
> are the results. This top was glued up from 4 pieces from the same board.
> From left to right, 2 and 4 are splotchy.
>
> Will a spit coat of shellac eliminate the splotchies? Why would shellac
> not
> splotch like any other finish?
>
> Test on scrap does not work well here as the problem is inconsistency
> within
> the same board.
>
> Help.
>
> -Steve
>
>


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