I bought a couple of oak tables finished fairly lightly in a sprayed two pack clear with a view to tidying them up and moving them on, and have just finished cutting them back with fine 00 steel wool and polishing them with Rustin's beeswax polish. The thinking was basically that the fairly heavy build of wax it gives should work well over the still somewhat open grain.
They came up very nicely to give that soft and characterful gloss you get with wax, but it's quite hard work and it set me thinking that maybe there are better techniques than the basic manual methods I'm used to.
So (a) is this a decent wax polish, do some of the fancier brands/types offer any clear advantage, and is it possible to get a decent finish with wax over untreated wood?, (b) is there a better preparation, application and polishing technique? (e.g. I've heard of using a damped cloth pad to polish off in a variant of the spit and polish technique) and (c) what's about by way of power techniques for doing the same cutting back and polishing jobs? (I've tried a car type power buffer before, but it didn't seem to add all that much)
They came up very nicely to give that soft and characterful gloss you get with wax, but it's quite hard work and it set me thinking that maybe there are better techniques than the basic manual methods I'm used to.
So (a) is this a decent wax polish, do some of the fancier brands/types offer any clear advantage, and is it possible to get a decent finish with wax over untreated wood?, (b) is there a better preparation, application and polishing technique? (e.g. I've heard of using a damped cloth pad to polish off in a variant of the spit and polish technique) and (c) what's about by way of power techniques for doing the same cutting back and polishing jobs? (I've tried a car type power buffer before, but it didn't seem to add all that much)