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I use pencil. My study of antiques showed me that all inks fade over time but pencil stays pretty fresh.
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Sharpies work well for me. I have a cutting board that's about 11 years old now that I signed with a Sharpie and it hasn't faded at all. Once dried, Arm-R-Seal goes over it with no problems.
Whatever you use be sure to give it a try on some scrap to make sure it works as you expect.
John
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Check out a paint pen. Might be the ticket for what you want.
Mike
If you're the smartest person in the room, you're in the wrong room!
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Drill a small hole in the bottom and affix a penny there too. Get one minted the year the table is put into service.
Those are the coolest little discoveries on old, antique furniture.
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Uniball Signo RT is the only pen that I have found which, once the ink is dry, will not smear with polyurethane, shellac, or lacquer. If you sign & start wiping a finish on right away, it will though - need to sign and then either let it have time to dry or pad a few layers of finish on by using a straight up-down motion first. (Can you tell I'm primarily a turner & like to get done *N-O-W*?
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Electric branding iron with year attachment numbers. Number 1 or 2 pencil also works well.