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Best process to finish and treat elm timber


Steve Bullman
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14 minutes ago, Steve Bullman said:

Onto the next project and preparing some yew for console tables. Need to sell a couple of these now so I can put all the tools I bought through the books 😀

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Some nice boards there Steve,your getting into this now i reckon😂

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On 16/01/2022 at 16:14, Steve Bullman said:

What would be the best finish for it to make it nice and slippy?

 

As there hasn’t been any response yet, I’ll suggest a hardwearing finish like polyurethane. An oil finish on yew looks good. So instead of using a brush, you could make a 50/50 mix of polyurethane and turps then apply it with a rag like an oil finish, i.e. wipe it on, leave for a few minutes to soak in, then wipe off what’s left on the surface. I’d start with say three coats and see how it looks. 


Andrew

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As there hasn’t been any response yet, I’ll suggest a hardwearing finish like polyurethane. An oil finish on yew looks good. So instead of using a brush, you could make a 50/50 mix of polyurethane and turps then apply it with a rag like an oil finish, i.e. wipe it on, leave for a few minutes to soak in, then wipe off what’s left on the surface. I’d start with say three coats and see how it looks. 

Andrew

Have you any pics of timber finished this way ??
I'm looking for a hard finish on woods but have never used a polyurethane or acrylic finish.
My thought on yew is that oils tend to turn it brown and loose the reds , I would like to keep yew as natural as possible to its final finish after sanding and preserve those colours if that's possible.
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6 hours ago, MattyF said:


Have you any pics of timber finished this way ??
I'm looking for a hard finish on woods but have never used a polyurethane or acrylic finish.
My thought on yew is that oils tend to turn it brown and loose the reds , I would like to keep yew as natural as possible to its final finish after sanding and preserve those colours if that's possible.

I've not used it on yew but can't see why it shouldn't work. I'll post some pics in a day or two when I've time to take them. It was a tip I got from a 'well known' Yorkshire furniture maker I met at the Harrogate woodworking show years ago and was his method of finishing dining tables.

 

Andrew

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