From reading comments and talking with people over the years, it appears the majority (edit: of woodworkers) prefer a rubbed-out satin finish on wood rather than mirror/gloss. Why?
Even if it's not a majority, the question remains. Why do (at least some) people prefer a satin finish over a mirror-like glossy one? Simple preference is likely the main reason, of course, but I'm interested in the underlying influences. I suspect it's more than just "cos I like how it looks". What are the perceived benefits or dis-benefits driving the preference?
I mean, it's not as if satin is the best way to show off wood grain. Any surface "matting" will always make wood grain appear less crisp. It also helps reflected incident light swamp underlying detail even more thoroughly and over a wider area. I find that satin finishes hold on to skin oils (incl. fingerprints) more than gloss ones do too, so no advantage there either. Rather sub-optimal, really.
Perhaps it's a perception that it's easier to create an acceptable satin finish than a gloss one. It's true that some blemishes or surface inconsistencies are harder to see on a satin finish, but those faults are still present. Satin doesn't remove them (being more thorough in surface prep does that) it just disguises them - a bit.
Personally, I prefer a mirror surface. It's all about the wood for me, the grain, the patterns in that grain and interaction with shifting light. A high quality gloss finish lets ALL that shine through without compromise. Satin looks OK, even great at times, but it can't match gloss for delivering punch and clarity to the underlying wood.
Here's a couple of veneered blocks finished with shellac (only). Not french polished though. I applied 8 coats of shellac (min 2 hours between coats) then let it dry for two days before rubbing almost back to the wood. I then repeated this twice more, but rubbed out less finish each time. The remaining shellac layer is 0.05 mm thick and was hand buffed with Meguiar's for the final mirror surface. Note how some of the grain details show through the reflection of the coin. You don't get that with a satin finish.
You don't get clear mirror reflections "straight on" with satin either - only at at low angles. You can with gloss...
Interested to hear others views. Gloss or satin - and why. Cheers
Even if it's not a majority, the question remains. Why do (at least some) people prefer a satin finish over a mirror-like glossy one? Simple preference is likely the main reason, of course, but I'm interested in the underlying influences. I suspect it's more than just "cos I like how it looks". What are the perceived benefits or dis-benefits driving the preference?
I mean, it's not as if satin is the best way to show off wood grain. Any surface "matting" will always make wood grain appear less crisp. It also helps reflected incident light swamp underlying detail even more thoroughly and over a wider area. I find that satin finishes hold on to skin oils (incl. fingerprints) more than gloss ones do too, so no advantage there either. Rather sub-optimal, really.
Perhaps it's a perception that it's easier to create an acceptable satin finish than a gloss one. It's true that some blemishes or surface inconsistencies are harder to see on a satin finish, but those faults are still present. Satin doesn't remove them (being more thorough in surface prep does that) it just disguises them - a bit.
Personally, I prefer a mirror surface. It's all about the wood for me, the grain, the patterns in that grain and interaction with shifting light. A high quality gloss finish lets ALL that shine through without compromise. Satin looks OK, even great at times, but it can't match gloss for delivering punch and clarity to the underlying wood.
Here's a couple of veneered blocks finished with shellac (only). Not french polished though. I applied 8 coats of shellac (min 2 hours between coats) then let it dry for two days before rubbing almost back to the wood. I then repeated this twice more, but rubbed out less finish each time. The remaining shellac layer is 0.05 mm thick and was hand buffed with Meguiar's for the final mirror surface. Note how some of the grain details show through the reflection of the coin. You don't get that with a satin finish.
You don't get clear mirror reflections "straight on" with satin either - only at at low angles. You can with gloss...
Interested to hear others views. Gloss or satin - and why. Cheers
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