StuartC24
14th June 2008, 08:40 PM
I am working on re finishing a blackwood sideboard - so far so good. Cleaned up nicely and finishing with shellac.
I haven't heaps of shellac experience but have had some instruction from an old pro. Having looked through the forums I can't find quite the answer I'm looking for.
My plan calls for 2-3 layers brushed on, then some rubbed on layers and perhaps some beeswax with superfine steel wool for a satin finish.
My trouble is, no matter how lightly I put it on and watching like a hawk, the shellac will run into a dark front edge - rather than a run. I can sand them out - and the layer of shellac I just put on. The edge is quite fine rather than a huge ridge of run.
Is the mix too thin?
Should I just keep putting coats on hoping they will blend and merge with topcoats?
Should I sand with steel wool in between and clean up these blemishes?
Should I just forget the brush and go for a pad?
Look forward to your input.
StuartC24
I haven't heaps of shellac experience but have had some instruction from an old pro. Having looked through the forums I can't find quite the answer I'm looking for.
My plan calls for 2-3 layers brushed on, then some rubbed on layers and perhaps some beeswax with superfine steel wool for a satin finish.
My trouble is, no matter how lightly I put it on and watching like a hawk, the shellac will run into a dark front edge - rather than a run. I can sand them out - and the layer of shellac I just put on. The edge is quite fine rather than a huge ridge of run.
Is the mix too thin?
Should I just keep putting coats on hoping they will blend and merge with topcoats?
Should I sand with steel wool in between and clean up these blemishes?
Should I just forget the brush and go for a pad?
Look forward to your input.
StuartC24