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Anyone use cardboard on turnings - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: Anyone use cardboard on turnings (/showthread.php?tid=7333351) |
Anyone use cardboard on turnings - Arlin Eastman - 09-18-2017 I have been thinking lately that after sanding I may use cardboard to burnish the surface to a natural glow. I have in the past used stiff cardboard to blacken edges of turnings in ebonizing it but that was all. What do you guys think? RE: Anyone use cardboard on turnings - SceneryMaker - 09-18-2017 (09-18-2017, 04:35 PM)Arlin Eastman Wrote: I have been thinking lately that after sanding I may use cardboard to burnish the surface to a natural glow. I've never used cardboard. I would think the sharp corners where it creases when you bend it would dig grooves. I do burnish with a paper towel at fairly high speed. 2,000 rpm on a 10" dia piece, for example. RE: Anyone use cardboard on turnings - SteveS - 09-18-2017 Nope. Never was into burnishing of any type. I prefer to use steel wool to get the last traces of sanding marks out. It's pretty rare that I don't apply a finish so burnishing doesn't have a purpose for my work. RE: Anyone use cardboard on turnings - AHill - 09-18-2017 (09-18-2017, 04:35 PM)Arlin Eastman Wrote: I have been thinking lately that after sanding I may use cardboard to burnish the surface to a natural glow. Kraft paper. Same stuff paper grocery bags are made of. Cardboard is too stiff, and corrugated cardboard has glue in it, which will scratch your work. RE: Anyone use cardboard on turnings - MichaelMouse - 09-19-2017 (09-18-2017, 11:45 PM)AHill Wrote: Kraft paper. Same stuff paper grocery bags are made of. Cardboard is too stiff, and corrugated cardboard has glue in it, which will scratch your work. ^^^ This. No, it won't suffice for smoothing sanding marks. The principle behind the burnishing is heating and hardening the surface, not abrading it. RE: Anyone use cardboard on turnings - Arlin Eastman - 09-19-2017 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() I was just asking. ![]() ![]() ![]() I always sand to between 600 to 1000 grit paper and was wondering if it would some how burnish the surface even better, but I will just try craft paper instead. Some things I think would look great with no finish just a good sanding and a burnishing and it would never need a buffing again. RE: Anyone use cardboard on turnings - SceneryMaker - 09-21-2017 Something you might try, just for fun, is to burnish with the smooth back side of your gouge. RE: Anyone use cardboard on turnings - Large Wooden Badger - 09-21-2017 I haven't done a lot of turning and haven't for years now but I always used a handful of sawdust. RE: Anyone use cardboard on turnings - MichaelMouse - 09-25-2017 (09-21-2017, 07:17 AM)Large Wooden Badger Wrote: I haven't done a lot of turning and haven't for years now but I always used a handful of sawdust. Make sure it's not shavings from harder wood used on softer. |