11-04-2015, 03:16 PM
A lady asked me to strip this little table and make it look pretty. OK, sure.
I should have known better with all those little crevices in the carvings. Actually, I don't think they are carved. They look more like they were molded and then glued on the legs.
The finish was done with a combination of a base layer of white paint and then something that might have been brown lacquer or shellac on top to create that crackle look. The brown layer came off very easily; the white paint took a lot more work. I ended up stripping it twice and had to use a dental pick on nearly every crevice of those carvings to get all the paint specks out. I think it took me 5 or 6 hours all together.
But underneath all that nasty paint was some very nice mahogany. The top was a ring of solid mahogany with segmented veneer on top.
I wanted to put some color back into it and thought I would dye it with Transtint dye. I made up some dye in water and put some on the bottom just to check and it wouldn't even absorb into the wood. Must be I didn't get everything out of the wood even after stripping it twice and wiping it down with MS several times. So I switched to dye in DNA. Also no go. I ended up using Watco Danish Oil, a 50/50 mix of cherry and dark walnut, and that absorbed with no problems. This is what it looked like all lathered up before I wiped it off after 30 minutes.
The Watco was very easy to use and gave a nice uniform color with no blotching. After 3 days I applied a coat of Arm-R-Seal and that did not want to dry very well until I brought it upstairs where it was 75 deg. Even then it almost 3 days. Good grief what a pain this little table turned out to be.
Final pics to follow when done.
John
I should have known better with all those little crevices in the carvings. Actually, I don't think they are carved. They look more like they were molded and then glued on the legs.
The finish was done with a combination of a base layer of white paint and then something that might have been brown lacquer or shellac on top to create that crackle look. The brown layer came off very easily; the white paint took a lot more work. I ended up stripping it twice and had to use a dental pick on nearly every crevice of those carvings to get all the paint specks out. I think it took me 5 or 6 hours all together.
But underneath all that nasty paint was some very nice mahogany. The top was a ring of solid mahogany with segmented veneer on top.
I wanted to put some color back into it and thought I would dye it with Transtint dye. I made up some dye in water and put some on the bottom just to check and it wouldn't even absorb into the wood. Must be I didn't get everything out of the wood even after stripping it twice and wiping it down with MS several times. So I switched to dye in DNA. Also no go. I ended up using Watco Danish Oil, a 50/50 mix of cherry and dark walnut, and that absorbed with no problems. This is what it looked like all lathered up before I wiped it off after 30 minutes.
The Watco was very easy to use and gave a nice uniform color with no blotching. After 3 days I applied a coat of Arm-R-Seal and that did not want to dry very well until I brought it upstairs where it was 75 deg. Even then it almost 3 days. Good grief what a pain this little table turned out to be.
Final pics to follow when done.
John