Some news after sanding a few samples to 10'000-grit. That is, this insanely high grit provides a significant improvement on chatoyance! And this is also true if sanding is followed by shellac coating.
Full detail here:
https://www.chatometry.com/ultra-fine-sanding/
Paolo
Reminds me of planing or planing, scraping and then scraping with a dull thin scraper that has no damage on it. There is some life to the surface, but without really good pictures, it's hard to show it.
And as I mentioned either here or somewhere else, my wife refers to wood with chatoyance or figure as "wood that I finished with the dirt still on it".
There are three cabinets that I made from relatively low cost cherry. At the time i started them, I thought sanding them to 320 would help them look "more factory", which was what I was aiming for. In the end, I'd wished I'd planed and scraped them if necessary with scraping - it would've taken a lot less time and I'd have ingested less dust. The amount of padding on shellac to be ready for the topcoat would've been 1/3rd.
No kidding, my wife's first comment was "why would you put finish on them without cleaning the dirt off?".
The wood doesn't match or anything, it was just "run of the mill" left over from my lumber guy at the time. Unfortunately, he retired. He knew this was a little better than normal, but it was $3 a board foot. The sides are ply (the outsides on both ends are also raised panel, but the side facing is ply). Surprisingly, the ply was sawn so that it "has a lot of dirt", too.
The wood does have a little bit of chatoyance. For a short period of time, I kind of liked to walk into the kitchen and look at it, but it has darkened over time as cherry does and we all stop paying attention to things we see several times a day.