I have a finishing question. I have some "antique looking" Jack Daniels
bottle labels that I would like to laminate on the front of a cabinet. I'm
not sure if laminate is the right word. The cabinet doors are painted. The
labels are paper without an adhesive backing. How could I attach the labels
and apply a clear finish (I assume multiple coats) and protect the look of
the paper labels? Do I need spray equipment? I have brushed on shellac to
finish children's painted toys. Is that an option or will shellac yellow
the paper?
"nprlisner" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I have a finishing question. I have some "antique looking" Jack Daniels
> bottle labels that I would like to laminate on the front of a cabinet. I'm
> not sure if laminate is the right word. The cabinet doors are painted. The
> labels are paper without an adhesive backing. How could I attach the
> labels
> and apply a clear finish (I assume multiple coats) and protect the look of
> the paper labels? Do I need spray equipment? I have brushed on shellac to
> finish children's painted toys. Is that an option or will shellac yellow
> the paper?
This sounds like it would qualify as decoupage. See
http://www.hgtv.com/hgtv/pac_ctnt_nobanner/text/0,,HGTV_10680_14711,FF.html
John
>
> "nprlisner" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>>I have a finishing question. I have some "antique looking" Jack
>>Daniels
>> bottle labels that I would like to laminate on the front of a
>> cabinet. I'm not sure if laminate is the right word. The cabinet
>> doors are painted. The labels are paper without an adhesive backing.
>> How could I attach the labels
>> and apply a clear finish (I assume multiple coats) and protect the
>> look of the paper labels? Do I need spray equipment? I have brushed
>> on shellac to finish children's painted toys. Is that an option or
>> will shellac yellow the paper?
>
> This sounds like it would qualify as decoupage. See
>
> http://www.hgtv.com/hgtv/pac_ctnt_nobanner/text/0,,HGTV_10680_
14711,FF.
> html
>
> John
>
>
>
>
I've never heard that term. I will look it up. Thanks.
On Sun, 04 Dec 2005 11:10:51 -0600, nprlisner <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I have some "antique looking" Jack Daniels
>bottle labels that I would like to laminate on the front of a cabinet.
Google for "decoupage"
It's a Victorian technique that goes through periodic revivals. You
paint the timber (if required), stick the labels down, then coat with
something transparent. Many repeats of coat-dry-rub down later, they've
sunk into the surface. Some pieces have an entirely smooth surface,
yours probably just need sealing and can be left slightly proud.
For adhesive use any suitable paste - wallpaper paste, gum arabic, white
PVA.
For the transparent coating, definitely use blonde shellac. Shellac
differs from modern varnish in that it's entirely solvent based, not a
cure. Successive layers thus merge into each other seamlessly. Make
sure it's well dried before rubbing down (hard in this weather). You
might use a coat of button shellac (darker) at the finish, but stick
with blonde for the "bodying". If you want a non-gloss finish, dull it
out by rubbing with fine pumice on cloth.
You can also antique the final finish with a crackle finish based on
hide glue (Google again)
Try it out with scrap first!