Finishing Plywood for Shed Walls
Many thanks for any advice and corrections to my understanding on this topic! Also, my apologies if this ought to be in "The Shed" forum, but I thought this might also be a useful topic for this area?
I have done some looking into this, and there seems to be a limited amount of stuff to find on finishing plywood - particularly, I want to use this plywood to line the walls of a workshop I'm fitting out. As such, I may not want to leave the plywood raw, or a raw colour, depending on the amount of light this will "suck" out of the space, and I might need to paint it white or near-white.
Personally, I'd prefer the look of it in it's natural state with a finish of varnish/shellac or similar for the aesthetics. I also realise that might make the space quite dark (though I have calculated it'll have about 2500 lumens of light per square metre installed), so I might need to paint the plywood white.
I'm planning on using the "Furniture Grade" ply from Trademaster in Sydney - this plywood is very smooth right out of the box, and doesn't tolerate any sanding, hence, my thinking is that it will need to be sealed first, and then optionally painted.
My plan, based on what I've been able to find to date, is to initially run a coat or two of shellac on the plywood, thus sealing the fibres. If that doesn't darken the room too much, I think I might leave it there.
In the future, as more light is needed (simply due to age), I would then have the option to run over that with a white or off-white latex based paint.
Is my plan and theory correct, or am I completely on the wrong track? Also would appreciate any other ideas I haven't considered!
Pine flooring takes home-made limewash beautifully.. Modify for plywood walls.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
clear out
If you want to lighten it but still see the grain try a lime wash finish.
We used Feast Watson on the interior and wardrobe doors upstairs.
Wiped it on and off and a clear coat of nitro cellulose when dry to keep it clean.
20 years now and looking good.
H.
Wanting a uniform clear white transparent finish on our clear pine 140 x 21 floor boards we mixed our own.
1. Sand to eliminate any height difference in boards. (Not necessary in plywood wall. It won't be walked on.)
2. Mix 1 part paint: two parts water. (We used Dulux wall paint in Napkin White which we happened to have and used for a sample. We liked it so much we went ahead with the whole floor area
3. Apply with rag. Work quickly and wipe off a section at a time to avoid hard wet/dry lines.
4. Coat with clear satin water-based finish. We used Cabot's, sanding between coats. Damp mop. Apply last coat and let dry thoroughly.
Walls would not need this degree of finishing, probably a coat of the water/paint mix then a top coat of clear. I've put the full procedure here in case someone wants to use it on floors. It looks amazing and doesn't show dust, which suits a less than award-winning housekeeper very well.