Moonsafari69":2toddpjj said:
I'm a big fan of Osmo generally but I'm looking for a varnish solution that is a tad less expensive and will dry harder.
I'd be the same, I'm much in favour of harder finishes and the excessive price of the Osmo finishes for the amateur puts me off them anyway. Plus I know you can get very similar performance/looks from something you mix up in a clean jam jar in your kitchen :mrgreen:
Moonsafari69":2toddpjj said:
Do you have any 'go-to' brands or maybe brands that you'd avoid? Also, do you thin down with white spirit or do you use something else?
Like Bob I've had good results with even the cheapest varnishes, including 151 and the house brand in our equivalent of Poundland.
Re. this from Bob, some comments/observations:
Dilute the oil based poly with anything from 25% to 50% thinners (or white spirit).
Wipe on well, even to the point of scrubbing it in.
Then wipe it all off again.
You can thin oil-based varnishes to any degree desired or needed. When making wiping varnish for yourself it is counter-productive to dilute too much, but you can thin to ridiculously high levels and the varnish will still dry hard (despite some persistent myths warning about over-dilution).
In short, any amount of added spirits from 5% to 95% won't affect the ability of the varnish to cure, although of course it can have a direct bearing on drying time.
You can wipe away all excess varnish however it's isn't always necessary, or desirable. Obviously the more you wipe away the more you waste as I refer to above, but also the more you wipe away the more coats you have to apply to get to a given final coat thickness. So despite the seeming advantage of the much faster drying time when you wipe away all or most of the thinned varnish it may actually be a case of one step forward two steps back in certain cases.
You can wipe on and leave it, wipe on and wipe away some excess or wipe away all the excess as you find most useful.
During the winter when drying times are challenging I will tend to thin more and wipe away more excess so that I can more reliably apply a second coat the next day, but if I can leave the piece somewhere out of sight where I'm not tempted to apply the next coat too early I will sometimes wipe on, leave it, and just put it in the spare bedroom for a couple of days until I remember it's there.