I'm finishing a cherry table with Bartley's Gel Varnish. I'm having some
difficulty getting the final coat to look good. No matter what I do, I
leave rag marks where I pick up and put down the rag when I'm wiping off the
excess. I thought that perhaps it was on the low side, temperature-wise, so
I warmed up the varnish a bit before application. I also tried wiping it
off quickly thinking maybe I was leaving it on too long and it was getting
tacky too fast. Am I doing something wrong? Do I just live with it and rub
out the imperfections later? Could I put a liquid varnish over the top that
might flow a little better?
todd
Well, subjectively, I'd say the varnish is within visual specifications.
Thanks,
todd
"Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> If you are working within the correct temp and humidity range, your
varnish
> may be getting old.
> I have found this to be a problem if the varnish in the can is darker or
> thicker than Vaseline. It must be light in color and relative thin. You
> may also be putting the varnish to thinly as it may be starting to dry
> before you have a chance to wipe it off. Don't let it set too long. I
> often wipe it on and "immediately" wipe it off.
>
> Keep in mind that even though your Bartleys varnish may be new from the
> store, it may still be old. Again, the gel varnish should look and feel
> like Vaseline for the best results.
>
>
>
>
> "todd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > I'm finishing a cherry table with Bartley's Gel Varnish. I'm having
some
> > difficulty getting the final coat to look good. No matter what I do, I
> > leave rag marks where I pick up and put down the rag when I'm wiping off
> the
> > excess. I thought that perhaps it was on the low side,
temperature-wise,
> so
> > I warmed up the varnish a bit before application. I also tried wiping
it
> > off quickly thinking maybe I was leaving it on too long and it was
getting
> > tacky too fast. Am I doing something wrong? Do I just live with it and
> rub
> > out the imperfections later? Could I put a liquid varnish over the top
> that
> > might flow a little better?
> >
> > todd
> >
> >
>
>
If you are working within the correct temp and humidity range, your varnish
may be getting old.
I have found this to be a problem if the varnish in the can is darker or
thicker than Vaseline. It must be light in color and relative thin. You
may also be putting the varnish to thinly as it may be starting to dry
before you have a chance to wipe it off. Don't let it set too long. I
often wipe it on and "immediately" wipe it off.
Keep in mind that even though your Bartleys varnish may be new from the
store, it may still be old. Again, the gel varnish should look and feel
like Vaseline for the best results.
"todd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I'm finishing a cherry table with Bartley's Gel Varnish. I'm having some
> difficulty getting the final coat to look good. No matter what I do, I
> leave rag marks where I pick up and put down the rag when I'm wiping off
the
> excess. I thought that perhaps it was on the low side, temperature-wise,
so
> I warmed up the varnish a bit before application. I also tried wiping it
> off quickly thinking maybe I was leaving it on too long and it was getting
> tacky too fast. Am I doing something wrong? Do I just live with it and
rub
> out the imperfections later? Could I put a liquid varnish over the top
that
> might flow a little better?
>
> todd
>
>