Krome10
Established Member
Hi all
I'm a complete novice - as you're about to find out!
I have a blessing and a curse. Usually I research everything to the hilt, which means I learn a lot and (try to) do things properly. But the research phase takes an age and the doing is delayed.
But then I went and done the complete opposite. I'm restoring some old retro G-Plan furniture and similar to sell, and the plan was just to clean it up. But it still looked a bit dull afterwards. I then came by a small bottle of Rowney Purified Linseed Oil; I've no idea where it came from! Instead of checking what it was, I just slapped a bit on. It looked good, so I've gone ahead and covered all the furniture in the stuff. Working in the reverse of my usual fashion I then checked out what this stuff is and found that it is used by artists to "reduce the consistency of oil colour and slow down the drying time of your painting".
So have I done something stupid? Or have I accidentally come across a nice finishing oil that hopefully dries quickly and leave a lovely soft sheen while bringing up the grain beautifully?
Cheers
I'm a complete novice - as you're about to find out!
I have a blessing and a curse. Usually I research everything to the hilt, which means I learn a lot and (try to) do things properly. But the research phase takes an age and the doing is delayed.
But then I went and done the complete opposite. I'm restoring some old retro G-Plan furniture and similar to sell, and the plan was just to clean it up. But it still looked a bit dull afterwards. I then came by a small bottle of Rowney Purified Linseed Oil; I've no idea where it came from! Instead of checking what it was, I just slapped a bit on. It looked good, so I've gone ahead and covered all the furniture in the stuff. Working in the reverse of my usual fashion I then checked out what this stuff is and found that it is used by artists to "reduce the consistency of oil colour and slow down the drying time of your painting".
So have I done something stupid? Or have I accidentally come across a nice finishing oil that hopefully dries quickly and leave a lovely soft sheen while bringing up the grain beautifully?
Cheers