(08-04-2017, 12:18 PM)FloridaRetiree Wrote: I am flummoxed -- which is not at all that unusual at my age!
What are you using shellac for and why?
I bought a quart of shellac, . . . about 40 years ago. I vaguely
remember why. It was little used and died in the can a short
time afterwards.
Thank goodness for water based acrylics that have all but completely
superseded shellac and the old oil based enamels. Except perhaps
for tung oil spar varnishes and their gradual degrade on boat usage.
To say little about the flammability hazard in spraying atomized
alcohol around the shop.
Perhaps things have changed, and I don't understand?
I doubt anything has changed, but you might not understand all the times where shellac is your best friend. I use a LOT of shellac, especially with waterborne topcoats. Shellac is the universal sealer; you can use it over most anything and most anything sticks to it. So if you are using an oil based stain you can spray a coat of dewaxed shellac to seal it, and then have confidence your WB topcoat will stick to it and not peal off months later.
I use Sealcoat dewaxed shellac most of the time I use shellac. It imparts a very slight amber tone to most woods and eliminates the dead look that some WB's have. Sometimes I want a different color, but dying the wood doesn't give the right look. Often, adding Transtint dye to shellac and spraying one or two toner coats will give me the color and look I'm after.
If you strip a piece of furniture it's often very difficult to remove the silicone wax that was used on it by well intentioned owners. This is where dewaxed shellac really saves the day. If you spray one or two light coats of shellac on it, it will seal in any residual silicone such that whatever you put on top will bond to it.
You can wipe, pad, brush, or spray shellac. Not many other finishes are so versatile. It makes a fine finish by itself on light duty objects. Old shellac finishes can sometimes be revived with a good cleaning and careful padding of alcohol, or with a fresh coat of shellac. New coats of shellac melt seamlessly into the old finish, not true of most other finishes. Yet shellac strips off easily with chemical stripper.
Shellac is incredibly useful and versatile. You've been missing out.
John