Silly_Billy
Established Member
Would anyone be able to advise me which finishes are safe for kids' toys? How about wax? Treatex hardwax oil?
Silly_Billy":2herjhdu said:Would anyone be able to advise me which finishes are safe for kids' toys? How about wax?
thetyreman":3uzjboym said:in some ways with kids toys, the best finish might be no finish, because it'll get damaged anyway.
Silly_Billy":5rfn2ebf said:thetyreman":5rfn2ebf said:in some ways with kids toys, the best finish might be no finish, because it'll get damaged anyway.
Good point! In that case, I wonder if there's a childsafe paint that might be more durable?
Yes. Once any solvent has evaporated all that's left is wax.Silly_Billy":3l5naxaq said:How about wax?
You'd have to check with them. It is likely though that unless they specifically tested for this a spokesman won't say it's safe because they need to have legal weight behind that statement to protect against litigation.Silly_Billy":3l5naxaq said:Treatex hardwax oil?
[/quote]whatknot":j8dw5731 said:Wow, I may give them a miss personally
Cheapest thing they have is a 100ml sample pot at £4.50 !
£78 for 5l of emulsion
Farrow & Ball paint is a good option as its all water based and organic: "Our paints have been independently tested and approved to meet the Toy Safety Standard* so parents can rest assured when decorating their children’s nurseries and bedrooms or painting children’s accessories, toys or cots."
There's more information about that here: http://www.farrow-ball.com/eco-friendly ... cp-content (I don't work for them fyi I just like their ethos)
Sawyer":2bjhii8h said:For culinary items, I use olive oil; cheap, easy moderately protective and obviously safe; so maybe a good choice for toys too.
Have to say something about this.El Barto":zvkzu0cn said:I'm happy to pay the premium for
A. High quality
B. Lower impact on the environment
C. Ease of use (it's water based - easy to clean)
D. Made in Dorset
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