Blackwood dining table finish
Hi , recently purchased a blackwood 1930/40's dining table in need of TLC. previous owner has refinished top with a shabby one coat PU. luckily legs were not attacked, legs are coming up beatifully with the restoration polish (linseed, brown vinegar & Methylated Spirit). what can i do to restore the top - dont want to french polish as it will be in daily use but want to use a traditional finish that give a nice gloss and patina which will service daily use.
thanks guys in advance
Please do not disregard French polish - one of the oldest and still the best
Hi, I respectfully disagree with the earlier post and would like to make four points.
1. Blackwood is the perfect candidate for a good shellac French polish as it takes it well and the finish lasts very well/is very hard wearing on Blackwood;
2. A lot of unfair criticism has been levelled at shellac "French Polish" over the years. In my experience a good, hard coat of shellac will stand up to extreme treatment while giving a lovely old lustre. I have an 1830's Australian cedar dining table that is French polished. We live with it, use it and over many years of our family growing up have had children tip fruit juices, hot tea, coffee etc. over it, (maybe even some red wine by yours faithfully!) all without lasting harm. A quick wipe clean and no harm done.
3. The wonderful thing about a traditional shellac finish is that it is so easy to repair and freshen up if it does suffer damage. I also have a 1930's Tasmanian Coogans labelled table that the antique dealer had damaged the polish on part of the top. I tried to patch it, but it did not work so I cleaned off the old shellac with metho and re-polished the top about five years ago. No one can tell, now, that this is a new finish because Blackwood takes the finish so well.
4. Antique and almost antique furniture with a new technology finish has very little resale value. It becomes merely "second hand" furniture and is valued as such. Antiques and vintage furniture with an appropriate, preferably original or else original style finish is much more highly valued. That is because those finishes are proven performers over long-time. Contemporary finishes are not proven long-time and make any item of old furniture look "new". If you want new, buy new, if you want old then finish with a traditional finish IMHO. (Now, if you want pub furniture for the swillers it may be different but I am talking domestic use).
I hope that this helps.
Regards
David