BradPalmer
31st July 2011, 04:56 PM
Hey Guys, new to this so forgive if I am in the wrong spot.
I have a beauriful old Jarrah slab coffee table, about 15 years old, I want to restore the surface. The timber has many beautiful fiery red colours and a natural edge all round and is about a metre long by half metre in kind of an oval shape.
I guess that it was originally varnished / lacquered /oiled, unsure which. I have sanded the top with an orbital sander from grades 120 thru 400, now the top is as smooth as a baby's you know what.
I started down the varnish track with Cabothane but after 4 coats couldn't seem to get rid of brush marks. I have since resanded it to get rid of all that.
I have then started thinking of Shellac cream and the EEE Ubeaut shine stuff after reading some of the stuff on this forum but am a home handyman nightmare and not sure which direction to take.
The top of the table itself has lots of little cracks and divots etc as one would expect in a natural piece and I applied a small amount of shellac cream to one little area but doesn't seem to give the glossy shine that i had expected, lots of spotted areas especially around the cracks and divots.
Any ideas or recommendations on finishing this baby.
I have a beauriful old Jarrah slab coffee table, about 15 years old, I want to restore the surface. The timber has many beautiful fiery red colours and a natural edge all round and is about a metre long by half metre in kind of an oval shape.
I guess that it was originally varnished / lacquered /oiled, unsure which. I have sanded the top with an orbital sander from grades 120 thru 400, now the top is as smooth as a baby's you know what.
I started down the varnish track with Cabothane but after 4 coats couldn't seem to get rid of brush marks. I have since resanded it to get rid of all that.
I have then started thinking of Shellac cream and the EEE Ubeaut shine stuff after reading some of the stuff on this forum but am a home handyman nightmare and not sure which direction to take.
The top of the table itself has lots of little cracks and divots etc as one would expect in a natural piece and I applied a small amount of shellac cream to one little area but doesn't seem to give the glossy shine that i had expected, lots of spotted areas especially around the cracks and divots.
Any ideas or recommendations on finishing this baby.