Steve Maskery
Established Member
Morning all.
I've done a bit of (but not very much) veneering in the past, but it was years and years ago and so I would never call myself an expert.
I want my oak wardrobe doors to be quarter-sawn in appearance. I was hoping to buy MDF ready veneered, but when I saw the boards in the flesh, the leaves were very narrow, only about 60mm. The surface looked stripey and if I wanted stripey doors I'd buy two tins of paint.
So I have to consider doing it myself. I have a vac press and some veneer (though I've not checked that I have enough, I may have to go shopping). I've done this same job before, which is why I don't really want to do it again!
So I thought I'd buy some veneered MDF, sand off one face and just veneer that, leaving the original back as balance. It would half the amount of veneering I would need to do.
So I rang a woody pal who has a big drum sander and asked if I could use it.
"Yes", said he, "but why would you want to? Most of the balance is from the glue rather than the veneer itself. Why not just veneer over the existing veneer, that's what I would do".
Now Andy has a lot more experience than I do, so I should listen. It would certainly make my life easier. And I do know that in Ye Olden Days, people would lay a cross-layer of veneer before a finish veneer.
So my Q is, if I do this, are there any potential pitfalls that I need to avoid, in order to keep my doors acceptably flat?
I've done a bit of (but not very much) veneering in the past, but it was years and years ago and so I would never call myself an expert.
I want my oak wardrobe doors to be quarter-sawn in appearance. I was hoping to buy MDF ready veneered, but when I saw the boards in the flesh, the leaves were very narrow, only about 60mm. The surface looked stripey and if I wanted stripey doors I'd buy two tins of paint.
So I have to consider doing it myself. I have a vac press and some veneer (though I've not checked that I have enough, I may have to go shopping). I've done this same job before, which is why I don't really want to do it again!
So I thought I'd buy some veneered MDF, sand off one face and just veneer that, leaving the original back as balance. It would half the amount of veneering I would need to do.
So I rang a woody pal who has a big drum sander and asked if I could use it.
"Yes", said he, "but why would you want to? Most of the balance is from the glue rather than the veneer itself. Why not just veneer over the existing veneer, that's what I would do".
Now Andy has a lot more experience than I do, so I should listen. It would certainly make my life easier. And I do know that in Ye Olden Days, people would lay a cross-layer of veneer before a finish veneer.
So my Q is, if I do this, are there any potential pitfalls that I need to avoid, in order to keep my doors acceptably flat?