Woodturning (rec.crafts.woodturning) To discuss tools, techniques, styles, materials, shows and competitions, education and educational materials related to woodturning. All skill levels are welcome, from art turners to production turners, beginners to masters.

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Default Has anyone tried ...

I bought some Renaissance (sp?) wax some time back. I opened it and
noticed the smell reminded me of shoe wax. So I was wondering if
anyone has tried shoe polish on a bowl? I figure that it will dry on
a bowl like it does on a shoe (Does anyone polish shoes anymore? I
have one pair that I still get the brush out for) and so should not
leave smears on fingers.
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Default Has anyone tried ...

On Jul 25, 3:50 pm, Kevin wrote:
I bought some Renaissance (sp?) wax some time back. I opened it and
noticed the smell reminded me of shoe wax. So I was wondering if
anyone has tried shoe polish on a bowl? I figure that it will dry on
a bowl like it does on a shoe


Hello, Kevin. Shoe polish is an old finish repair trick. Since it
doesn't penetrate the surface of the wood because the colors are held
in suspension, you can use it to hide scratches and surface wear with
a liberal application.

It is a quick fix for that coffee table top or dining room table top
you don't want to refinish, just spruce up. The good shoe polish like
KIWI or a couple of the English made brands has a lot of carnauba wax
in it, which is quite hard and durable. It makes a GREAT furniture
polish, and you can judge the quality of a good furniture polish by
how much carnauba it has in it.

I have seen wax (never used it myself) on woodturning projects and it
was pretty neat looking. We had a member of our old turning club try
it on a bunch of projects and it made a great highlighter and toner.
When he got the color he wanted, he finished it off with clear,
straight shoe polish.

To me, his finished product looked like tha stuff finished with any of
the high grade waxes. Just remember, once you finish with wax, you
can't successfully apply any other finish to your project unless you
strip it off. So no top coats of lacquer, etc.

Robert
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