GarF":17ew93h0 said:
... danish oil followed by garnet shellac to add some warmth ...
Shellac is well known as an all round barrier coat or sealer between problematic surfaces and subsequent finishes. The rider is that the shellac needs to be a dewaxed version in order to be sure other finishes such as oil based varnish, various lacquers, and so on will adhere to the shellac.
So, for example, if you suspect contamination on the surface of the prepared wood, such as silicone, wax, oil, resinous knots, etc, then dewaxed shellac is very good at adhering to such contaminated surfaces and, once dry, other finishes that are known to fail if applied over those contaminants, will often adhere successfully to the shellac. There's more to it than that, but the above is a potted introduction to some shellac properties.
In your case, if all you want to do is warm up the wood a bit (darken it basically), I wouldn't use Danish oil, which is a form of varnish. I'd just wipe on a light coat of boiled linseed oil and buff of thoroughly, which will give you the same darkening/warming effect, because it's the linseed or tung oil in Danish oil that does the darkening/warming, not the resins and solvents in it . Then leave it to dry for 24 hours or so, and apply the garnet shellac you say you plan to use - it will stick to the dried oil successfully. Whether or not you then apply a wax over the shellac would be optional. Slainte.