I've finally chosen the veneer combinations for my first chess board build. They're pictured here on random test blocks at various stages of experimental finishing and re-finishing. That is, they don't look their best here, but show the selection made. The walnut and maple veneers are for the dark colours (front and rear of each dark square on the board) with birch and oak covering either side of the light squares.
I'm consciously using "difficult" veneers (aka generally the most interesting looking ones) and have the expected holes, pores and grain fissures to deal with. Like these (some of which go right through)...
I want to fill these "features" individually by hand - right after initial sanding of the veneers for thickness, but before the "finish" sanding happens. There are a couple of other process steps here and it's a very convenient stage to do this. Note: this isn't a traditional chess board build, the squares remain separate individuals throughout, even when the board is finished.
I don't need exact colour matching, just a palette of very light, medium and very dark brown will do. I don't care about stain interaction either because I'm not staining anything, but I would worry about absorption of things like tung oil or the effect on hard wax oil finishes like Rubio or Osmo etc.
Sanding sealer is definitely out already and I want a wood-filler that goes proper hard too - waxy stuff won't do.
So what filler(s) would you recommend to use here?
How about wider-area filling of things like the pores in mahogany or (in this case) porous patches in walnut burl that weren't filled by glue? Could it be the same filler plastered over the surface with a putty knife, then sanded off? That would be really handy. Or would that need to be some other kind of filler?
Thanks in advance.
I'm consciously using "difficult" veneers (aka generally the most interesting looking ones) and have the expected holes, pores and grain fissures to deal with. Like these (some of which go right through)...
I want to fill these "features" individually by hand - right after initial sanding of the veneers for thickness, but before the "finish" sanding happens. There are a couple of other process steps here and it's a very convenient stage to do this. Note: this isn't a traditional chess board build, the squares remain separate individuals throughout, even when the board is finished.
I don't need exact colour matching, just a palette of very light, medium and very dark brown will do. I don't care about stain interaction either because I'm not staining anything, but I would worry about absorption of things like tung oil or the effect on hard wax oil finishes like Rubio or Osmo etc.
Sanding sealer is definitely out already and I want a wood-filler that goes proper hard too - waxy stuff won't do.
So what filler(s) would you recommend to use here?
How about wider-area filling of things like the pores in mahogany or (in this case) porous patches in walnut burl that weren't filled by glue? Could it be the same filler plastered over the surface with a putty knife, then sanded off? That would be really handy. Or would that need to be some other kind of filler?
Thanks in advance.