Hi
I have asked this question before, but I didn’t really come to a conclusive conclusion, so I’m going to try asking it again. I now have a substantial pile of moulding planes that require finishing. The reason I haven’t applied any finish, as I am being indecisive about the finish that I want to use. on earlier planes that I made, I simply use BLO. But they seem to get grimy very quickly, the grime is difficult clean off, and they don’t really have the kind of lustrous finish that I would like. So I need to choose something new and get it on these planes before they get dirty from being in my workshop.
Requirements…. Must look great, ideally wipe clean, must be a natural substance. I don’t want to put anything with “poly” in the ingredients on my planes. Hopefully will be quick to apply, not too messy, and will not require a “secret recipe”. It also needs to be something I’m going to stick with.
inspiration… From research into some of the well-known plane makers out there on the Internet do.
The historically traditional method is dump it in a bucket of BLO overnight. For a few extra shillings, they would give it a few coats of shellac. This isn’t a bad option, although it is time-consuming and messy.
Old Street Tools/MS Bickford use Min-Wax Antique Oil Finish, described as a “wiping varnish”, which a) isn’t available in the UK, and b) probably contains poly-something. There may be a UK equivalent. That might actually be good. Sounds like it is quick to apply, hasslefree, low maintenance.
Stavros Gakos uses BLO followed by several coats of an orange–flavoured shellac, which I guess is equivalent to button polish. I have tried this on various tools that I’ve made. It works pretty well, but it is messy, takes a long time, and they end up with this slightly “Donald Trump“ orange look, his planes are amazing though.
Caleb James uses a combination of Danish oil and BLO, followed by paste wax applied using a polissoir. He does get an amazing finish. I’m probably tending towards this at present. Although I’m not certain about Danish oil, whatever that is.
If anybody has any great ideas, you could help me to make the decision and get these planes (below) finished off.
Cheers
Steve
I have asked this question before, but I didn’t really come to a conclusive conclusion, so I’m going to try asking it again. I now have a substantial pile of moulding planes that require finishing. The reason I haven’t applied any finish, as I am being indecisive about the finish that I want to use. on earlier planes that I made, I simply use BLO. But they seem to get grimy very quickly, the grime is difficult clean off, and they don’t really have the kind of lustrous finish that I would like. So I need to choose something new and get it on these planes before they get dirty from being in my workshop.
Requirements…. Must look great, ideally wipe clean, must be a natural substance. I don’t want to put anything with “poly” in the ingredients on my planes. Hopefully will be quick to apply, not too messy, and will not require a “secret recipe”. It also needs to be something I’m going to stick with.
inspiration… From research into some of the well-known plane makers out there on the Internet do.
The historically traditional method is dump it in a bucket of BLO overnight. For a few extra shillings, they would give it a few coats of shellac. This isn’t a bad option, although it is time-consuming and messy.
Old Street Tools/MS Bickford use Min-Wax Antique Oil Finish, described as a “wiping varnish”, which a) isn’t available in the UK, and b) probably contains poly-something. There may be a UK equivalent. That might actually be good. Sounds like it is quick to apply, hasslefree, low maintenance.
Stavros Gakos uses BLO followed by several coats of an orange–flavoured shellac, which I guess is equivalent to button polish. I have tried this on various tools that I’ve made. It works pretty well, but it is messy, takes a long time, and they end up with this slightly “Donald Trump“ orange look, his planes are amazing though.
Caleb James uses a combination of Danish oil and BLO, followed by paste wax applied using a polissoir. He does get an amazing finish. I’m probably tending towards this at present. Although I’m not certain about Danish oil, whatever that is.
If anybody has any great ideas, you could help me to make the decision and get these planes (below) finished off.
Cheers
Steve