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Why not simply google: "how to wax canvas"
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08-06-2016, 08:45 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-06-2016, 08:48 AM by DCarr10760.)
I bought a roll of carving Rifflers from Patrick Leach awhile back. The roll was canvas and the Rifflers all were covered with superficial rust, (cleaned off beautifully in a vinegar bath). I Noticed that the canvas was rusty in spots that corresponded with the rust spots on the tools. It was clear these tools had been in the roll for a long time.
I am of the opinion that tool rolls are not a good long term storage solution, no matter what material they are made from. I do have a lot of tool rolls and use them to transport tools to jobs, classes, and the like, but when I'm done they go back into a chest.
Of course if you use the tools frequently you will be handling them and keeping track of them so you will see when rust begins to form, and you can correct it immediately. But for long term storage I think it's best to wipe them down with oil or wax and set them in drawer or a chest where not much is touching them.
DC
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Location: Orlando, Florida
Canvas is porous, like most fabrics, so moisture can get inside the canvas. With big swings in temperature, you can get condensation on tools inside canvas tool rolls. I live in the desert, so I don't get much, if any rust on my tools. When I was on assignment in Missouri for a couple of years, I found that wiping the tools down with some sort of oil (camelia, synthetic motor oil, etc.) before I return them to the roll mitigates the rust. Joel Moskowitz, from Tools for Working Wood, has at one time suggested stuffing a small rag soaked with oil in each pocket of a tool roll. The business end of the tool gets stuffed in the pocket.
Still Learning,
Allan Hill