Hi all, I have some lovely kiln-dried quarter sawn oak which I plan to make a sideboard from. It was sold to me as dried to 12-13% which seems to be true although I have yet to cut any in the middle and check there... but I trust the supplier.
The boards have been stacked in my lounge for six weeks (against Mrs P's wishes), so I am confident it will be pretty stable.
My question is when I take it to my fairly dry but unheated workshop next week for cutting, planing, jointing & finishing do I need to do anything to protect it from gaining moisture again? If so, what should I do?
I am a slow worker so I think it could take me two months or more to build the sideboard and it's just not going to be practical to keep taking the timber back and forth.
I'd be grateful for any thoughts or suggestions.
Thanks
The boards have been stacked in my lounge for six weeks (against Mrs P's wishes), so I am confident it will be pretty stable.
My question is when I take it to my fairly dry but unheated workshop next week for cutting, planing, jointing & finishing do I need to do anything to protect it from gaining moisture again? If so, what should I do?
I am a slow worker so I think it could take me two months or more to build the sideboard and it's just not going to be practical to keep taking the timber back and forth.
I'd be grateful for any thoughts or suggestions.
Thanks