Ok. Sister had a dining table. oak/oak veneer, main table top is veneer. A bit back she tried to refinish the table in varnish, which didnt take, and left the top sticky to the touch.
I couldn't honestly say for sure but i think a cellulose finish originally.
Recommended a few things for her to try, acetone, wipe down, meths, but if anything it made the stickiness worse.
So showed her how to scrape back the finishes using a stanley blade, as those are easy to come by, and i didnt think she would get on with an actual cabinet scraper.
Well that removed all the stickiness, and the high spots of the original finish, but obviously due to the textured nature of oak, which they like to leave 'rough' so people can feel the grain and think their oak dining table is really an oak dining table.
Now to refinish.
If she could remove the lacquer totally, maybe an oil finish, but as its only veneer, cant really sand it back enough without risking cutting through, does anyone agree that I should suggest to her to redo it in a cellulose lacquer, which can be brushed or rollered on.
As to cellulose, my experience of it is only spray(2 pack) which we cant really do here using my set up(got a minimite3) so paint/roller on.
Anyone got any recommendations ? by cellulose, im probably more meaning nitrocellulose, and its better hardwearing and more suitable for something like a dining table.
I believe the nitro is fast drying, so would i apply as a thick coat and sand to do maybe 2 coats, or thinned multiple layers, with just a bit of light denibbing.
I couldn't honestly say for sure but i think a cellulose finish originally.
Recommended a few things for her to try, acetone, wipe down, meths, but if anything it made the stickiness worse.
So showed her how to scrape back the finishes using a stanley blade, as those are easy to come by, and i didnt think she would get on with an actual cabinet scraper.
Well that removed all the stickiness, and the high spots of the original finish, but obviously due to the textured nature of oak, which they like to leave 'rough' so people can feel the grain and think their oak dining table is really an oak dining table.
Now to refinish.
If she could remove the lacquer totally, maybe an oil finish, but as its only veneer, cant really sand it back enough without risking cutting through, does anyone agree that I should suggest to her to redo it in a cellulose lacquer, which can be brushed or rollered on.
As to cellulose, my experience of it is only spray(2 pack) which we cant really do here using my set up(got a minimite3) so paint/roller on.
Anyone got any recommendations ? by cellulose, im probably more meaning nitrocellulose, and its better hardwearing and more suitable for something like a dining table.
I believe the nitro is fast drying, so would i apply as a thick coat and sand to do maybe 2 coats, or thinned multiple layers, with just a bit of light denibbing.