Mackay Cedar dining table
Hello everyone
I have recently purchased an almighty slab of Mackay Cedar (Red Siris) from Boutique Timbers that I am making a dining table out of. I am curious as to what people's thoughts are on the best finish to use. It will be used as a typical dining table, as in it will actually be used quite often and not just a display piece in a room. The mate who the table is for is quite happy to do any upkeep in the future if that matters (re-oil for example).
Cheers
Finishes tend to be a very individual choice - here is my opinion
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Ghallahad
Hello everyone
I have recently purchased an almighty slab of Mackay Cedar (Red Siris) from Boutique Timbers that I am making a dining table out of. I am curious as to what people's thoughts are on the best finish to use. It will be used as a typical dining table, as in it will actually be used quite often and not just a display piece in a room. The mate who the table is for is quite happy to do any upkeep in the future if that matters (re-oil for example).
Cheers
I have also purchased some of this beautiful timber, but am yet to make anything or finish it so my experience with the timber itself is zero. However, when you ask what the "best" finish is I'm afraid that you will get opinions rather than a definitive answer (although they may be expressed as definitive!:rolleyes:) I have seen superb finishes with lots of different products - it depends on whether your mate wants a satin finish, a gloss or super-high gloss etc.
My opinion, not shared by everyone, is that shellac is the best finish for items like dining tables. I started out restoring antique Australian cedar furniture and it had always originally been finished with shellac - usually French Polished (i.e. shellac applied in very dilute coats with a fabric "rubber") but sometimes with a brushed finish. Shellac has proven to stand the test of time - items finished with shellac from the 1830's still look great. Shellac is much more resistant to heat and spills than it is given credit for. My children tested the surfaces very thoroughly and the shellac survived as long as the clean up was reasonably prompt (even with hot water or boiling water, orange juice etc.). If a spill was overlooked or something too hot was put directly on the table and the shellac went white then a simple reviver would fix it, or in more extreme circumstances another application of shellac. With time a shellac finished table will develop patina, i.e. small blemishes and faults, but they add to the look rather than detract, once again, my opinion.
I also have a set of early cedar chairs that I purchased very cheaply because someone had tried to strip off the shellac. The chairs looked ghastly, whitish and smeary. I wasn't sure how to fix them so I tried applying more shellac with a lacquer brush (very fine natural hair brush). Zap, they looked better immediately so with the brush for the legs and a rubber for the rail-top-backs, I polished them. I have since had comments about what a lovely original finish they have! Shellac is resilient and repairable.
With shellac you can stop at any gloss level that you want, from satin to piano finish. French polishing with a rubber is pretty easy to master, and if you use a good brush you may even get a decent finish without using a rubber. Ubeaut used to publish a book on how to do it - it may still be available.
There are also of course some stunning pour-on super high gloss finishes that look like the timber is coated with glass, and lots of polyurethane finishes from satin to gloss. They are tough but if they do get damaged it is hard work to remove all the finish and start over. There are also some really good oil finishes like Tung oil and HBO (hard burnished oil) that I believe (have no personal experience) can be repaired if damaged by merely applying more oil - others on these forums can advise better than I can.
Good luck.