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Stacey
 
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Default What to do when lint free cloth isn't lint free?

Ok.. I am nearing completion of my first project. Yeah! I put off finishing
the project for a long time for fear I would screw it up. The staining
seemed to go well. I am now using a gel varnish to put the final coats. I
should mention I am making a bed The two side rails went fine. I just put
the first coat of varnish on the footboard and notice lint balls from my
lint-free cloth. So what do I do now. I guess wait until it dries and then
what?

Thanks

stacey


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www
 
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If they are stuck on the surface and not imbedded too far, a light sanding
my get them off?

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"Stacey" wrote in message
...
Ok.. I am nearing completion of my first project. Yeah! I put off

finishing
the project for a long time for fear I would screw it up. The staining
seemed to go well. I am now using a gel varnish to put the final coats.

I
should mention I am making a bed The two side rails went fine. I just

put
the first coat of varnish on the footboard and notice lint balls from my
lint-free cloth. So what do I do now. I guess wait until it dries and then
what?

Thanks

stacey




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Larry Jaques
 
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On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 12:53:09 +1000, the opaque "www"
clearly wrote:

If they are stuck on the surface and not imbedded too far, a light sanding
my get them off?


Figure out the grain direction and take a cabinetmaker's scraper
to them WITH the grain. DAMHIKT. g

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Patriarch
 
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"Stacey" wrote in
:

Ok.. I am nearing completion of my first project. Yeah! I put off
finishing the project for a long time for fear I would screw it up.
The staining seemed to go well. I am now using a gel varnish to put
the final coats. I should mention I am making a bed The two side
rails went fine. I just put the first coat of varnish on the
footboard and notice lint balls from my lint-free cloth. So what do I
do now. I guess wait until it dries and then what?

Thanks

stacey



I've used gel varnish, and had decent results from it, but this last
project, I tried a standard trick with a wiping varnish. Flexner's book
has it, but most of the finishing gurus have written about it.

4 oz McCloskey's oil based varnish, 2 oz naptha, in a lidded squeeze
bottle, and padded on in a manner not unlike one would use for shellac.
No runs, no drips, no errors, dries comparatively quickly. Were you to
use this, I'd recommend using a brushing varnish from the same family as
the gel varnish you've been using so far, thinned for wiping.

My best lint free cloths are old cloth baby diapers, well washed over
their term of use. Old dish towels & t-shirts work well too. When my
mother passed away a couple of years ago, my sisters brought me 6 large
bags of such cloths, enough to last me nearly forever, I should think.

Some gurus clain to be able to wipe varnish with Viva paper towels.
I've not personally tested that theory...

If you're rubbing lightly between varnish coats with 0000 steel wool,
the lint should not present a problem.

Patriarch
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nospambob
 
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I used the Sherwin Williams fast dry oil varnish with folded Viva
paper towels Jeff Jewitt described if FWW several years ago and found
it easy and great. They're smooth, no texture means no beaded up
finish unless there's cockpit error. Naptha and varnish 1:1 gets 3
coats a day.

On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 00:34:52 -0500, Patriarch
wrote:

Some gurus clain to be able to wipe varnish with Viva paper towels.
I've not personally tested that theory...




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Steve
 
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Stacey,
You may want to try pieces of old panty hose (if you've got a spouse
that generates it) to wipe on varnish. No lint and you can get those
final coats on real smooth.
Steve

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