SG

"Steve Goodin"

09/12/2003 11:42 AM

Making wood filler

Anyone have suggestions for making my own wood filler?
I am making white oak furniture and have a few small gaps and nicks I will
need to fill. No store bought products seem to be working very well.
A woodworker friend suggested sanding some white oak and mixing the dust
with 2# Shellac to make a paste. Another friend claims that will be too
shiny and I should mix it with something else.
Any of you fine woodworkers have any thoughts?
Thanks,
Steve


This topic has 7 replies

RS

"Rob Stokes"

in reply to "Steve Goodin" on 09/12/2003 11:42 AM

09/12/2003 5:16 PM

Go with the shellac and sawdust. Mix it fairly thin and let it set up before
you sand it off and decide if you need another application. Sanding prior to
finishing will remove the shellac and "expose" the sawdust allowing it to
take a finish. It will be darker than the surrounding wood but should "tone"
nicely.

Good luck
Rob

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"Steve Goodin" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Anyone have suggestions for making my own wood filler?
> I am making white oak furniture and have a few small gaps and nicks I will
> need to fill. No store bought products seem to be working very well.
> A woodworker friend suggested sanding some white oak and mixing the dust
> with 2# Shellac to make a paste. Another friend claims that will be too
> shiny and I should mix it with something else.
> Any of you fine woodworkers have any thoughts?
> Thanks,
> Steve
>
>

EM

Eddie Munster

in reply to "Steve Goodin" on 09/12/2003 11:42 AM

09/12/2003 12:24 PM

It's white oak, so it will probably be painted. No worries.

John

EvoDawg wrote:

>But you
>may have a hard time getting it to take stain.
>
>Rich
>
>

JW

Jim Wilson

in reply to "Steve Goodin" on 09/12/2003 11:42 AM

09/12/2003 7:08 PM

Rob Stokes wrote...
> Go with the shellac and sawdust. Mix it fairly thin and let it set up before
> you sand it off and decide if you need another application. Sanding prior to
> finishing will remove the shellac and "expose" the sawdust allowing it to
> take a finish. It will be darker than the surrounding wood but should "tone"
> nicely.

I have added corn starch to counter the darkening effect. Sand a couple
test patches to get the mix right, but it's often close to equal parts
with the wood dust. Bandsaw dust works great.

Jim

HR

"Howard Ruttan"

in reply to "Steve Goodin" on 09/12/2003 11:42 AM

09/12/2003 12:28 PM


"EvoDawg" wrote...
> Steve Goodin wrote:
> > Anyone have suggestions for making my own wood filler?
> > I am making white oak furniture and have a few small gaps and nicks I
will
> > need to fill. No store bought products seem to be working very well.
> > A woodworker friend suggested sanding some white oak and mixing the dust
> > with 2# Shellac to make a paste. Another friend claims that will be too
> > shiny and I should mix it with something else.
>
> Mix glue and the sawdust from the project your gluing. works great! But
you
> may have a hard time getting it to take stain.

Use hide glue.

--

Cheers,
Howard

----------------------------------------------------------
Working wood in New Jersey - [email protected]
Visit me in the woodshop - www.inthewoodshop.org

MH

"Mike Hide"

in reply to "Steve Goodin" on 09/12/2003 11:42 AM

09/12/2003 6:21 PM

shellac probably will be too shiny. I would try colored wax fillers. The wax
is hard and is mineral based [ozerkite ? spelling?]
so finishes will take over it. Available at most finishing supply houses in
a myriad of colors. fill the voids and rub out with oooosteel wool with
mineral spirits if necessary.
--
mike hide



"Steve Goodin" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Anyone have suggestions for making my own wood filler?
> I am making white oak furniture and have a few small gaps and nicks I will
> need to fill. No store bought products seem to be working very well.
> A woodworker friend suggested sanding some white oak and mixing the dust
> with 2# Shellac to make a paste. Another friend claims that will be too
> shiny and I should mix it with something else.
> Any of you fine woodworkers have any thoughts?
> Thanks,
> Steve
>
>

DB

"David Babcock"

in reply to "Steve Goodin" on 09/12/2003 11:42 AM

09/12/2003 9:26 PM

I have taken sawdust from various woods and mixed it into a plain
plasticwood, but only to fill very small nicks and imperfections.

Dave

"Steve Goodin" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Anyone have suggestions for making my own wood filler?
> I am making white oak furniture and have a few small gaps and nicks I will
> need to fill. No store bought products seem to be working very well.
> A woodworker friend suggested sanding some white oak and mixing the dust
> with 2# Shellac to make a paste. Another friend claims that will be too
> shiny and I should mix it with something else.
> Any of you fine woodworkers have any thoughts?
> Thanks,
> Steve
>
>

Ed

EvoDawg

in reply to "Steve Goodin" on 09/12/2003 11:42 AM

09/12/2003 5:07 PM

Steve Goodin wrote:

> Anyone have suggestions for making my own wood filler?
> I am making white oak furniture and have a few small gaps and nicks I will
> need to fill. No store bought products seem to be working very well.
> A woodworker friend suggested sanding some white oak and mixing the dust
> with 2# Shellac to make a paste. Another friend claims that will be too
> shiny and I should mix it with something else.
> Any of you fine woodworkers have any thoughts?
> Thanks,
> Steve

Mix glue and the sawdust from the project your gluing. works great! But you
may have a hard time getting it to take stain.

Rich
--
"You can lead them to LINUX
but you can't make them THINK"


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