Anybody use it? Any good?
The product looks like it works very in his video's.
Thanks,
Trace
Anybody use it? Any good?
The product looks like it works very in his video's.
Thanks,
Trace
In an economy dependent on debt-based consumption, inflation is absolutely essential to reduce the real costs of servicing old debts so households can afford to buy more stuff on credit.
The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws.
- Tacitus
I'm not familiar with this product but as I understand it, what you want to do is to stop up/plug up the grain just a bit so that any stain doesn't penetrate too deeply.
What causes blotch is that the grain changes throughout a board and therefore stain penetrates at different rates.
Laying down a thinned coat (sealing coat, sanding sealer, etc. [lottsa names for this first coat]) of, for example, shellac (say a 1# cut) will serve this purpose. Often, just thinning whatever you plan to use as a finish coat can work, too.
I use a 1# cut of clear dewaxed shellac with great success. Charles is water cleanup so that could be a plus for some folks.
"A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".
– Samuel Butler
+1. I always have some in an 8oz squeeze bottle, and a padding cloth sealed in a half-pint mason jar. And another squeeze bottle with DA to pre-load the pad. Always ready to go, and there isn't any clean up to worry about.
By padding on a thin layer of 1# - 1.5#, the first strokes are pretty much dry by the time you get to the last stroke.
Have a few brushes also - the neat thing about a dedicated shellac brush is that you just straighten any wayward fibers, and put it on the shelf to dry/harden. Few minutes in DA and the hardened shellac dissolves. [Also have a cottage cheese container with "dirty DA" in it for soaking the brushes].
When I started woodworking, I didn't know squat. I have progressed in 30 years - now I do know squat.
Works great on maple and pine
Have a few brushes also - the neat thing about a dedicated shellac brush is that you just straighten any wayward fibers, and put it on the shelf to dry/harden. Few minutes in DA and the hardened shellac dissolves. [Also have a cottage cheese container with "dirty DA" in it for soaking the brushes].
I too use this method but I have introduced cleaning with an ammonia solution to keep the china bristles soft and the shellac flowing. I like cleaning with ammonia a little better than just soaking in DA.
Might be worth giving it a try?
dan