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Thread: Odorless/Low-Odor Finishes?
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23rd March 2020, 10:51 PM #1
Odorless/Low-Odor Finishes?
I have complaints from other members of my household that the scent of Raw Linseed Oil causes nausea and Beeswax polish causes headaches.
Are there any finishes which are low odor or odorless?
Or should I start mixing in Lavender oil with my beeswax and Linseed oil finishes?
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24th March 2020, 02:08 PM #2
Are you allowing it to cure fully? Once cured shouldn't have any scent.
If you're doing your finishing inside the dining room then, your only option might be mineral oil or no finish at all.
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24th March 2020, 05:39 PM #3
The complaints come during the time that I am applying the finish. Should I try using Paraffin oil or perhaps doing a mix of Linseed, paraffin and perhaps some lavender oil?
My thoughts at this stage are to experiment with some essential oils in the finish to mask the smell of the linseed oil.
It could also simply be that I am getting complaints because it is a new and unfamiliar smell to the other members of my household.
Last week they complained that the smell of the beeswax polish I used was an offensive odor. Seriously, I thought natural beeswax smelled nice - certainly nicer than the various scented sprays they're always chucking around the house.
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24th March 2020, 06:43 PM #4
There are modern finishes which have all but replaced what our grandfathers had for options.
MY favorite is MinWax Tung Oil Protective Finish. No, this is not straight Tung oil.
First coat seems to seal the surface, appears matte - satin in reflectance.
When there is no smell, (a week?) it's time for the second coat.
Do a gentle rub with XXX flat-stranded steel wool to cut off all the wicky-up bits of wood fiber,
Cuts like a million chisels and won't tear off the finish.
This usually goes almost satin. Stop there if you like it.
I go 4 coats on my wood carvings when I want a hard, water-wet, very glossy finish.
I buy my walking canes from a wood shop that does the very same, 50 canes at a time.
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25th March 2020, 12:05 PM #5
All of the low odor finishes I've come across are water based, so quite different from an oil or wax finish. Water based poly has a relatively mild smell that dissipates within an hour or two.
I stand to be corrected on this but I don't think you can have an oil based finish that doesn't have some kind of solvent stink. I think Osmo PolyX is probably the least stinky oil style finish I've used. But it's still got a pretty strong odor for a day or two. Maybe you could have an exhaust fan installed in your work area to vent the odor outdoors?
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25th March 2020, 02:33 PM #6
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25th March 2020, 02:41 PM #7
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25th March 2020, 04:08 PM #8
The livos oil doesn't have much of a smell
Sent from my ONEPLUS A5010 using Tapatalk
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25th March 2020, 10:42 PM #9
yeah you need to aim for a water based finish.
it just sounds like your trying to mask the smell, not the actual fumes/odour given off by the oil based finishes.
depending on what you making check out something like "odies finishes" smells like honey or something but provides a great finish
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27th March 2020, 11:49 AM #10
Funny thing. I got a fresh bottle of raw linseed oil and mixed it with mineral turps to refinish a wooden plane. No complaints about the smell! Perhaps my old bottle of Linseed Oil had started to go bad.
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