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My now favorite is garnet shellac, followed by whatever (if needed) top coat the piece calls for. For a table that will see some wear, I would top coat it with something, in my case it would be an oil based varnish (alkyd/soya formula) or a quality waterborne. If you use a waterborne it would pay to make the shellac dewaxed.
I started with absolutely nothing. Now, thanks to years of hard work, careful planning, and perseverance, I find I still have most of it left.
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I like
Thai Seed (seed shellac is not waxy); but garnet or Ruby look nice. If you want UV protection or the table will be hard use any of the GF waterborne topcoats would work.
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Quodcumque potest manus tua facere instaner opere Ecclesiastes
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My experience is limited however I found that a light coat of BLO (wipe on-wipe off immediately) followed by several applications of garnet shellac worked very well for me. If blotching is going to be an issue then I used a wash coat of garnet shellac well sanded back before the BLO.
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Thanks, Curt
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I did this 20+ years ago with some kind of oil followed by paste wax. I can't remember if it was tung oil or danish oil, but it was something I bought locally from the BORG or hardware store. It was simple and fast - and it looks much the same today. For no abuse applications it's a good option.