lewisericeric
New member
Hi guys,
I'm new here but need some urgent advice! A while ago, I bought some Wenge to make some coffee tables/dining tables with.
I used a danish oil to darken the wood and let that dry for about a week and then used a matt varnish to finish it off.
I wasn't happy with the quality of the varnish and because I live in an enclosed apartment, I used a chemical stripper rather than sanding to strip back to bare wood so I could start again with a Ronseal matt varnish.
Now, I'd just finished a coffee table with three coats of varnish and it looked great for 3 days and now it looks like the varnish is 'decaying'. The varnish looks like it's dissolving???
I'm not sure how this is happening? Surely the stripper can't still be activated? It was washed off, first with white spirit and then with a wet cloth. Left to dry for a day before coating with varnish and the varnish wasn't applied to thick or with coats in close succession to each other. (I always leave drying times at least double what is recommended on the tin - had too many disasters in the past!)
Can anyone tell me why the varnish seems to have gone really flat, and original marks etc showing through?? Do I just keep giving light sands with wire wool and applying more and more coats?
I'm new here but need some urgent advice! A while ago, I bought some Wenge to make some coffee tables/dining tables with.
I used a danish oil to darken the wood and let that dry for about a week and then used a matt varnish to finish it off.
I wasn't happy with the quality of the varnish and because I live in an enclosed apartment, I used a chemical stripper rather than sanding to strip back to bare wood so I could start again with a Ronseal matt varnish.
Now, I'd just finished a coffee table with three coats of varnish and it looked great for 3 days and now it looks like the varnish is 'decaying'. The varnish looks like it's dissolving???
I'm not sure how this is happening? Surely the stripper can't still be activated? It was washed off, first with white spirit and then with a wet cloth. Left to dry for a day before coating with varnish and the varnish wasn't applied to thick or with coats in close succession to each other. (I always leave drying times at least double what is recommended on the tin - had too many disasters in the past!)
Can anyone tell me why the varnish seems to have gone really flat, and original marks etc showing through?? Do I just keep giving light sands with wire wool and applying more and more coats?