custard
Established Member
I've found that birch ply test sample,
Reading from left to right,
Osmo 3186. Described as "Matt". A better description might be "intense". This is the one I found a bit chalky.
Untreated Birch Ply.
Osmo 3044. Described as "Raw Untreated Oil". In real life (as opposed to a carp phone photo) it does a fine job of preserving the underlying colour of fine grained, paler timbers, plus it delivers excellent stain protection while still remaining nice and matt. Where it falls down is UV protection, but frankly so do almost all other products outside of a professional spray shop with deep pockets.
Untreated Birch Ply.
Osmo 3111. Described as "Satin". It's not materially different in glossiness to "Matt" (like all Osmo products they're compressed into a fairly narrow "gloss to matt" spectrum), but it's less intense and not nearly as chalky. Looks great on bleached Oak!
A note of warning, these effects vary substantially on different timbers. Osmo descriptions may be a bit rubbish but their sample sachets are brilliant, so always always always run your own tests on your own timbers.
Reading from left to right,
Osmo 3186. Described as "Matt". A better description might be "intense". This is the one I found a bit chalky.
Untreated Birch Ply.
Osmo 3044. Described as "Raw Untreated Oil". In real life (as opposed to a carp phone photo) it does a fine job of preserving the underlying colour of fine grained, paler timbers, plus it delivers excellent stain protection while still remaining nice and matt. Where it falls down is UV protection, but frankly so do almost all other products outside of a professional spray shop with deep pockets.
Untreated Birch Ply.
Osmo 3111. Described as "Satin". It's not materially different in glossiness to "Matt" (like all Osmo products they're compressed into a fairly narrow "gloss to matt" spectrum), but it's less intense and not nearly as chalky. Looks great on bleached Oak!
A note of warning, these effects vary substantially on different timbers. Osmo descriptions may be a bit rubbish but their sample sachets are brilliant, so always always always run your own tests on your own timbers.