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#1
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Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la,
the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. Some background: My preference for finishing and refinishing wood, when appropriate, is regular old oil-based varnish. Hate polyurethane; don't have spray equipment for lacquer (which I used when I worked on guitars). I've been nursing a quart can of McCloskey varnish for about 10 years now, and it's getting depleted. So I started looking around for something to replace it with. I knew what I wanted. McCloskey no longer exists as a brand; they were bought by Cabot (part of the Valpar "family"), and I found what looked like the equivalent product, their gloss varnish: http://www.cabotstain.com/products/p...20Top%20Co at What I wanted was the "old school" product, their #8000. Unfortunately, after much calling around, I discovered that I cannot buy that product here in California; all I can get is the "modified" version, their #18000. And even finding this was a gigantic pain in the ass. I called every single local paint store here in the East Bay. The best I could get was an offer to order the stuff, and even that turned out to be impractical (their distributor couldn't get it, or I'd have to order 10 cans of it, etc., etc.) Finally found a store in San Francisco that had the stuff, and even then I had to convince the store staff that they *did* have it, and then they expressed surprise, and had only one can. So I bought it, something like $20. The stuff turned out to be pure ****. I used it the other day on a desktop I'm making for a client, stained birch plywood. I put on the first coat in the morning. It looked OK, so I went out to work and left it to dry. When I came back and checked it about 8 hours later, the stuff was still tacky, and it had glopped and coagulated and orange-peeled like crazy. A little while ago while exploring what has to be the greatest Ace Hardware store of them all around here (Pagano's in Alameda), I found a little 1/2 pint can of some varnish under Ace's brand, simply called "solvent-based varnish". They had nothing larger, so I bought it. Used it on my latest refinishing project (a 100-year-old wooden view camera, my Rochester Optical Co. "Universal"). It worked beautifully. But since I had so little of it, I was guarding it jealously. There certainly wasn't enough for my 26x64" desktop. So I took the little can over to my little local Ace, Ellis Ace here in Oakland, and asked them if they could order me a quart can. Well, they actually had several of them in stock! (The quart was only $9, less than half what I paid for that Cabot crap.) So I took one, and used it yesterday on my desktop. (It's item # 276A111, Ace 16385.) Beautiful results. Just beautiful. This stuff does exactly what one wants it to do. It brushes on smoothly, builds up quickly, stays open and liquid long enough to move it around and correct any drips, thick or thin spots (you can easily pick out hairs or other foreign objects with your bare fingers, then brush over the spot). And best of all, after applying, it lays down as flat as an Illinois cornfield. Blessedly, shimmeringly flat. It's an absolute joy to work with. The exact opposite of something like "brushing lacquer" (now there's a contradiction in terms if I ever heard one!), which drives me nuts trying to work to get it flat without brushstrokes in the alotted 50-millisecond time period. Or polyurethane, with its inauthentic, plasticky-looking surface. For those who are searching for a good wood finishing solution where a high-gloss surface is appropriate, I highly recommend this stuff. -- Found--the gene that causes belief in genetic determinism |
#2
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Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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![]() snip Beautiful results. Just beautiful. Thanks a bunch for sharing a positive result. There.s a good Ace Hardware in our area , so I plan to checkout their stock put away some for future projects. snip it lays down as flat as an Illinois cornfield. Anybody flying to LA from O'Hare can confirm that. Very impressive this time of ear with 7' cornstalks and budding tassels. Soybean fields are prettier green , though. Joe |
#3
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Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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David Nebenzahl wrote:
Thanks for varnish info, I like varnish too. ____________ The exact opposite of something like "brushing lacquer" (now there's a contradiction in terms if I ever heard one!), which drives me nuts trying to work to get it flat without brushstrokes in the alotted 50-millisecond time period. Don't work it...flow on a generous amount L I G H T L Y and S L O W L Y, drag out edges a bit to feather them. By "lightly" I mean the weight of the brush and not much more. By "slowly" I mean around 4-6 seconds per foot. A good bristle brush, BTW. Brush on another brush load a bit away from the previous then L I G H T L Y and S L O W L Y blend with previous edge(s) and feather edges. Then leave it alone. It will flow together fairly well but will still look awful until it is totally dry. Once dry, it will look fine as the amount left after drying is a small fraction of the wet volume. IME and I've used gallons and gallons of the stuff. If you're getting brush strokes you are either not putting on enough or you are pushing too hard with the brush or you are brushing too fast. Or any combination. -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico |
#4
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dadiOH wrote:
.... If you're getting brush strokes you are either not putting on enough or you are pushing too hard with the brush or you are brushing too fast. Or any combination. The other "or" I'd add is the brush isn't up to the task... -- |
#5
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Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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On Jul 23, 1:31*pm, David Nebenzahl wrote:
After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. Some background: My preference for finishing and refinishing wood, when appropriate, is regular old oil-based varnish. Hate polyurethane; don't have spray equipment for lacquer (which I used when I worked on guitars). I've been nursing a quart can of McCloskey varnish for about 10 years now, and it's getting depleted. So I started looking around for something to replace it with. I knew what I wanted. McCloskey no longer exists as a brand; they were bought by Cabot (part of the Valpar "family"), and I found what looked like the equivalent product, their gloss varnish: http://www.cabotstain.com/products/p...?productTypeNa... What I wanted was the "old school" product, their #8000. Unfortunately, after much calling around, I discovered that I cannot buy that product here in California; all I can get is the "modified" version, their #18000. And even finding this was a gigantic pain in the ass. I called every single local paint store here in the East Bay. The best I could get was an offer to order the stuff, and even that turned out to be impractical (their distributor couldn't get it, or I'd have to order 10 cans of it, etc., etc.) Finally found a store in San Francisco that had the stuff, and even then I had to convince the store staff that they *did* have it, and then they expressed surprise, and had only one can. So I bought it, something like $20. The stuff turned out to be pure ****. I used it the other day on a desktop I'm making for a client, stained birch plywood. I put on the first coat in the morning. It looked OK, so I went out to work and left it to dry. When I came back and checked it about 8 hours later, the stuff was still tacky, and it had glopped and coagulated and orange-peeled like crazy. A little while ago while exploring what has to be the greatest Ace Hardware store of them all around here (Pagano's in Alameda), I found a little 1/2 pint can of some varnish under Ace's brand, simply called "solvent-based varnish". They had nothing larger, so I bought it. Used it on my latest refinishing project (a 100-year-old wooden view camera, my Rochester Optical Co. "Universal"). It worked beautifully. But since I had so little of it, I was guarding it jealously. There certainly wasn't enough for my 26x64" desktop. So I took the little can over to my little local Ace, Ellis Ace here in Oakland, and asked them if they could order me a quart can. Well, they actually had several of them in stock! (The quart was only $9, less than half what I paid for that Cabot crap.) So I took one, and used it yesterday on my desktop. (It's item # 276A111, Ace 16385.) Beautiful results. Just beautiful. This stuff does exactly what one wants it to do. It brushes on smoothly, builds up quickly, stays open and liquid long enough to move it around and correct any drips, thick or thin spots (you can easily pick out hairs or other foreign objects with your bare fingers, then brush over the spot). And best of all, after applying, it lays down as flat as an Illinois cornfield. Blessedly, shimmeringly flat. It's an absolute joy to work with. The exact opposite of something like "brushing lacquer" (now there's a contradiction in terms if I ever heard one!), which drives me nuts trying to work to get it flat without brushstrokes in the alotted 50-millisecond time period. Or polyurethane, with its inauthentic, plasticky-looking surface. For those who are searching for a good wood finishing solution where a high-gloss surface is appropriate, I highly recommend this stuff. -- Found--the gene that causes belief in genetic determinism You nursed a lousy quart of varnish 10 years! Thats a laugh and a half, I bet it was full of crap 7 years ago, A normal year for me was 20-40 gallons. I guess in 50 years or so you might just go through enough quarts to find the real good stuff, and its not at Ace. |
#6
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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![]() "ransley" wrote You nursed a lousy quart of varnish 10 years! Thats a laugh and a half, I bet it was full of crap 7 years ago, A normal year for me was 20-40 gallons. I guess in 50 years or so you might just go through enough quarts to find the real good stuff, and its not at Ace. Care to let the rest of us know what you think the good stuff is? Art |
#7
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Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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David Nebenzahl wrote:
After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. [...] A little while ago while exploring what has to be the greatest Ace Hardware store of them all around here (Pagano's in Alameda), I found a little 1/2 pint can of some varnish under Ace's brand, simply called "solvent-based varnish". They had nothing larger, so I bought it. Used it on my latest refinishing project (a 100-year-old wooden view camera, my Rochester Optical Co. "Universal"). It worked beautifully. But since I had so little of it, I was guarding it jealously. There certainly wasn't enough for my 26x64" desktop. So I took the little can over to my little local Ace, Ellis Ace here in Oakland, and asked them if they could order me a quart can. Well, they actually had several of them in stock! (The quart was only $9, less than half what I paid for that Cabot crap.) So I took one, and used it yesterday on my desktop. (It's item # 276A111, Ace 16385.) Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. |
#8
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Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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HeyBub wrote:
David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. snip Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. See: http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...ds=Ace%2016385 -- Jack Novak Buffalo, NY - USA |
#9
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Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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Nova wrote:
HeyBub wrote: David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. snip Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. See: http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...ds=Ace%2016385 That's a 1/2 pint container. The gallon is 16391, the quart is 16389. Chris |
#10
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on 7/23/2009 6:14 PM (ET) Nova wrote the following:
HeyBub wrote: David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. snip Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. See: http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...ds=Ace%2016385 $32.50 for a half pint? |
#11
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willshak wrote:
on 7/23/2009 6:14 PM (ET) Nova wrote the following: HeyBub wrote: David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. snip Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. See: http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...ds=Ace%2016385 $32.50 for a half pint? A case of 6 - 1/2 pints. -- Jack Novak Buffalo, NY - USA |
#12
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on 7/23/2009 6:44 PM (ET) Nova wrote the following:
willshak wrote: on 7/23/2009 6:14 PM (ET) Nova wrote the following: HeyBub wrote: David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. snip Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. See: http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...ds=Ace%2016385 $32.50 for a half pint? A case of 6 - 1/2 pints. I guess I skipped over that part. |
#13
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willshak writes:
on 7/23/2009 6:44 PM (ET) Nova wrote the following: willshak wrote: on 7/23/2009 6:14 PM (ET) Nova wrote the following: HeyBub wrote: David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. snip Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. See: http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...ds=Ace%2016385 $32.50 for a half pint? A case of 6 - 1/2 pints. I guess I skipped over that part. Four qts for $38.87 at http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...sh-p-5857.html 2 gals for $47.54 at http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...sh-p-5858.html |
#14
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on 7/23/2009 7:36 PM (ET) Scott Lurndal wrote the following:
willshak writes: on 7/23/2009 6:44 PM (ET) Nova wrote the following: willshak wrote: on 7/23/2009 6:14 PM (ET) Nova wrote the following: HeyBub wrote: David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. snip Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. See: http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...ds=Ace%2016385 $32.50 for a half pint? A case of 6 - 1/2 pints. I guess I skipped over that part. Four qts for $38.87 at http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...sh-p-5857.html 2 gals for $47.54 at http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...sh-p-5858.html Even better, A 55 gallon drum for $98.95 Nah. Just kidding. :-) |
#15
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![]() "HeyBub" wrote in message m... Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. Or if it is a franchise store, that particular store orders it from a different source. |
#16
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![]() "David Nebenzahl" wrote in message .com... After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. Some background: My preference for finishing and refinishing wood, when appropriate, is regular old oil-based varnish. Hate polyurethane; don't have spray equipment for lacquer (which I used when I worked on guitars). I've been nursing a quart can of McCloskey varnish for about 10 years now, and it's getting depleted. So I started looking around for something to replace it with. Gosh Dave, finishes do go bad. If you have been using a 10 year old quart of finish you may have been missing out on more modern finishes. The product that the store had "1" of may have been way past it's shelf life. Anyway, I use a bit more than 1 quart every 10 years. ;~) , but have been having good luck with General Finishes for the last 30 years and more recently Lawrence McFadden products. IIRC Lawrence McFadden products are only available on line however they are a family owned company that has been around longer than me. |
#17
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Nova wrote:
HeyBub wrote: David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. snip Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. See: http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...ds=Ace%2016385 Ha! Thanks. But it looks like the 'droid who spoke to me would know the difference... I was looking on this site: http://www.acehardware.com/home/inde...d=PPC:76293361 Notice the different URLs: "acehardwaresuperstore" vs. "acehardware" |
#18
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HeyBub wrote:
Nova wrote: HeyBub wrote: David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. snip Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. See: http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...ds=Ace%2016385 Ha! Thanks. But it looks like the 'droid who spoke to me would know the difference... I was looking on this site: http://www.acehardware.com/home/inde...d=PPC:76293361 Notice the different URLs: "acehardwaresuperstore" vs. "acehardware" I'd think any of the Ace employees should be able to look up the UPC code when it's manufactured by their corporation. If you want it they should be able to order it. On second thought, you might have to ask for the manager... -- Jack Novak Buffalo, NY - USA |
#19
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HeyBub wrote:
Nova wrote: HeyBub wrote: David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. snip Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. See: http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...ds=Ace%2016385 Ha! Thanks. But it looks like the 'droid who spoke to me would know the difference... I was looking on this site: http://www.acehardware.com/home/inde...d=PPC:76293361 Notice the different URLs: "acehardwaresuperstore" vs. "acehardware" BTW: http://www.acehardware.com/paintHub/...&productId=030 -- Jack Novak Buffalo, NY - USA |
#20
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On 7/23/2009 2:14 PM HeyBub spake thus:
David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. Nah, it's their useless web site. Even the people who work at Aces will tell you that their website sucks. No point even looking there for anything. I asked when I bought the quart and was told that it was a currently-available item (even though the can had quite a bit of dust on the lid, which is why I asked). -- Found--the gene that causes belief in genetic determinism |
#21
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On 7/23/2009 5:06 PM Leon spake thus:
"David Nebenzahl" wrote in message .com... After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. Some background: My preference for finishing and refinishing wood, when appropriate, is regular old oil-based varnish. Hate polyurethane; don't have spray equipment for lacquer (which I used when I worked on guitars). I've been nursing a quart can of McCloskey varnish for about 10 years now, and it's getting depleted. So I started looking around for something to replace it with. Gosh Dave, finishes do go bad. If you have been using a 10 year old quart of finish you may have been missing out on more modern finishes. The product that the store had "1" of may have been way past it's shelf life. Well, that's the point--actually 2 of them: 1. Another great thing about good old-fashioned oil-based (or "solvent-based" if you prefer) varnish is that it has, as far as I can tell, a near-infinite shelf life, provided it's carefully sealed between uses. I've used varnish that was actually older than that and it was still fine. 2. My point is that I prefer this old-school stuff to more modren finishes. Certainly to that crap I got from Cabot, which is apparently the latest technology. Anyway, I use a bit more than 1 quart every 10 years. ;~) , but have been having good luck with General Finishes for the last 30 years and more recently Lawrence McFadden products. IIRC Lawrence McFadden products are only available on line however they are a family owned company that has been around longer than me. Do they make a traditional oil-based varnish? Any links? -- Found--the gene that causes belief in genetic determinism |
#22
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![]() "David Nebenzahl" wrote in message .com... On 7/23/2009 5:06 PM Leon spake thus: Do they make a traditional oil-based varnish? Any links? http://lawrence-mcfadden.com/ http://www.generalfinishes.com/ |
#23
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In .com,
David Nebenzahl spewed forth: On 7/23/2009 5:06 PM Leon spake thus: "David Nebenzahl" wrote in message .com... After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. Some background: My preference for finishing and refinishing wood, when appropriate, is regular old oil-based varnish. Hate polyurethane; don't have spray equipment for lacquer (which I used when I worked on guitars). I've been nursing a quart can of McCloskey varnish for about 10 years now, and it's getting depleted. So I started looking around for something to replace it with. Gosh Dave, finishes do go bad. If you have been using a 10 year old quart of finish you may have been missing out on more modern finishes. The product that the store had "1" of may have been way past it's shelf life. Well, that's the point--actually 2 of them: 1. Another great thing about good old-fashioned oil-based (or "solvent-based" if you prefer) varnish is that it has, as far as I can tell, a near-infinite shelf life, provided it's carefully sealed between uses. I've used varnish that was actually older than that and it was still fine. 2. My point is that I prefer this old-school stuff to more modren finishes. Certainly to that crap I got from Cabot, which is apparently the latest technology. Anyway, I use a bit more than 1 quart every 10 years. ;~) , but have been having good luck with General Finishes for the last 30 years and more recently Lawrence McFadden products. IIRC Lawrence McFadden products are only available on line however they are a family owned company that has been around longer than me. Do they make a traditional oil-based varnish? Any links? not McFadden, but http://www.mohawk-finishing.com/cata...br=627&atomz=1 |
#24
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On 7/23/2009 7:39 PM Leon spake thus:
"David Nebenzahl" wrote in message .com... Do they make a traditional oil-based varnish? Any links? http://lawrence-mcfadden.com/ No oil-based varnish there that I can see. Lots of lacquer, sealers, polyurethane, but not what I'm looking for. http://www.generalfinishes.com/ None there either. Under "Oil Based Finishes" they have o Oilbase wood stains (nope) o Arm-R-Seal topcoats (nope: urethane, not what I want) o Gel stains o Danish oils & outdoor oil o Salad bowl finish -- Found--the gene that causes belief in genetic determinism |
#25
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On 7/23/2009 9:40 PM ChairMan spake thus:
In .com, David Nebenzahl spewed forth: On 7/23/2009 5:06 PM Leon spake thus: Anyway, I use a bit more than 1 quart every 10 years. ;~) , but have been having good luck with General Finishes for the last 30 years and more recently Lawrence McFadden products. IIRC Lawrence McFadden products are only available on line however they are a family owned company that has been around longer than me. Do they make a traditional oil-based varnish? Any links? not McFadden, but http://www.mohawk-finishing.com/cata...br=627&atomz=1 Good god, man, did you even look at that page? It's *white* varnish. Sheesh. Now this stuff might be closer: http://www.mohawk-finishing.com/cata...asp?ictNbr=216 At least it's clear. But I kinda doubt it; looks more like spar varnish. (Undoubtedly good for exterior finishing, but that's not what I'm after.) -- Found--the gene that causes belief in genetic determinism |
#26
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David Nebenzahl wrote:
On 7/23/2009 7:39 PM Leon spake thus: "David Nebenzahl" wrote in message .com... Do they make a traditional oil-based varnish? Any links? http://lawrence-mcfadden.com/ No oil-based varnish there that I can see. Lots of lacquer, sealers, polyurethane, but not what I'm looking for. http://www.generalfinishes.com/ None there either. Under "Oil Based Finishes" they have o Oilbase wood stains (nope) o Arm-R-Seal topcoats (nope: urethane, not what I want) o Gel stains o Danish oils & outdoor oil o Salad bowl finish Try Pettit, Interlux, and Epifanes. All have oil based varnishes. Good luck finding any of them if you're Californicated though. |
#27
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David Nebenzahl wrote:
On 7/23/2009 9:40 PM ChairMan spake thus: In .com, David Nebenzahl spewed forth: On 7/23/2009 5:06 PM Leon spake thus: Anyway, I use a bit more than 1 quart every 10 years. ;~) , but have been having good luck with General Finishes for the last 30 years and more recently Lawrence McFadden products. IIRC Lawrence McFadden products are only available on line however they are a family owned company that has been around longer than me. Do they make a traditional oil-based varnish? Any links? not McFadden, but http://www.mohawk-finishing.com/cata...br=627&atomz=1 Good god, man, did you even look at that page? It's *white* varnish. Sheesh. Now this stuff might be closer: http://www.mohawk-finishing.com/cata...asp?ictNbr=216 At least it's clear. But I kinda doubt it; looks more like spar varnish. (Undoubtedly good for exterior finishing, but that's not what I'm after.) Perhaps if you explained exactly what result you were going after it would help people steer you to an appropriate product. |
#28
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![]() "David Nebenzahl" wrote in message .com... Do they make a traditional oil-based varnish? Any links? I guess my original response was to point out that the more modern finishes regardless of brands are better than they were 10 years ago. Not all brands are created equal. General finishes has oil based poly finishes, you may or may not like this particular brands oil based poly finish. Personally I dislike a high closs finish. Concerning the General Finishes Arm-r-Seal "Gloss" oil based poly varnish, I get great results with wiping on a base coat to seal the wood followed up with a "single" final coat. That final coat goes on with, " and several years ago I thought I would never say this" a premium quality Wooster "foam" brush. Using a 3" brush you can normally cover 1.5 - 2 sq feet with a single dip to the can. That really helps to eleminate lap and brush marks and the surface settls out nicely. You really have to try the better brands to decide iwhether you like the finish or not. |
#29
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![]() "Leon" wrote in message years ago I thought I would never say this" a premium quality Wooster "foam" brush. And what prompted you to use a foam brush? Considering the poor reputation that many/most have as a finishing tool, why take the chance? |
#30
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David Nebenzahl wrote:
After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. Some background: My preference for finishing and refinishing wood, when appropriate, is regular old oil-based varnish. Hate polyurethane; don't have spray equipment for lacquer (which I used when I worked on guitars). I've been nursing a quart can of McCloskey varnish for about 10 years now, and it's getting depleted. So I started looking around for something to replace it with. I knew what I wanted. McCloskey no longer exists as a brand; they were bought by Cabot (part of the Valpar "family"), and I found what looked like the equivalent product, their gloss varnish: http://www.cabotstain.com/products/p...20Top%20Co at What I wanted was the "old school" product, their #8000. Unfortunately, after much calling around, I discovered that I cannot buy that product here in California; all I can get is the "modified" version, their #18000. And even finding this was a gigantic pain in the ass. I called every single local paint store here in the East Bay. The best I could get was an offer to order the stuff, and even that turned out to be impractical (their distributor couldn't get it, or I'd have to order 10 cans of it, etc., etc.) Finally found a store in San Francisco that had the stuff, and even then I had to convince the store staff that they *did* have it, and then they expressed surprise, and had only one can. So I bought it, something like $20. The stuff turned out to be pure ****. I used it the other day on a desktop I'm making for a client, stained birch plywood. I put on the first coat in the morning. It looked OK, so I went out to work and left it to dry. When I came back and checked it about 8 hours later, the stuff was still tacky, and it had glopped and coagulated and orange-peeled like crazy. A little while ago while exploring what has to be the greatest Ace Hardware store of them all around here (Pagano's in Alameda), I found a little 1/2 pint can of some varnish under Ace's brand, simply called "solvent-based varnish". They had nothing larger, so I bought it. Used it on my latest refinishing project (a 100-year-old wooden view camera, my Rochester Optical Co. "Universal"). It worked beautifully. But since I had so little of it, I was guarding it jealously. There certainly wasn't enough for my 26x64" desktop. So I took the little can over to my little local Ace, Ellis Ace here in Oakland, and asked them if they could order me a quart can. Well, they actually had several of them in stock! (The quart was only $9, less than half what I paid for that Cabot crap.) So I took one, and used it yesterday on my desktop. (It's item # 276A111, Ace 16385.) Beautiful results. Just beautiful. This stuff does exactly what one wants it to do. It brushes on smoothly, builds up quickly, stays open and liquid long enough to move it around and correct any drips, thick or thin spots (you can easily pick out hairs or other foreign objects with your bare fingers, then brush over the spot). And best of all, after applying, it lays down as flat as an Illinois cornfield. Blessedly, shimmeringly flat. It's an absolute joy to work with. The exact opposite of something like "brushing lacquer" (now there's a contradiction in terms if I ever heard one!), which drives me nuts trying to work to get it flat without brushstrokes in the alotted 50-millisecond time period. Or polyurethane, with its inauthentic, plasticky-looking surface. For those who are searching for a good wood finishing solution where a high-gloss surface is appropriate, I highly recommend this stuff. i'll stick with my varathane water based poly. Dries in three hours and looks like glass. Cleans up with water. done. s |
#31
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Edward A. Falk wrote:
In article , willshak wrote: $32.50 for a half pint? For six half pints. Just under $11/quart. more like $21.66 a quart. |
#32
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"HeyBub" writes:
Nova wrote: HeyBub wrote: David Nebenzahl wrote: After much arduous searching, I've found it, my Xanadu, my Shangri-la, the sine qua non of varnish. And all the time it was available right at my little local Ace Hardware store. snip Better stock up. The Ace website has no knowledge of * 276A111 * 16385 * ACE 16385 * "Varnish" (other than varnish removers) * "Solvent-based varnish" So I called Ace. They couldn't find it on their web site either. Probably the situation is: a) Ace can't ship hazardous materials, so they don't list it on their web site, or b) It's a discontinued item. See: http://www.acehardwaresuperstore.com...ds=Ace%2016385 Ha! Thanks. But it looks like the 'droid who spoke to me would know the difference... I was looking on this site: http://www.acehardware.com/home/inde...d=PPC:76293361 Notice the different URLs: "acehardwaresuperstore" vs. "acehardware" Acehardware is the "official" online store for the Ace hardware chain. Acehardwaresuperstore is the online site of an individual franchisee. If I remember correctly, they pre-existed the launch of the chain's official store and were granfathered in. While Ace franchisees are relatively independent, I don't believe that new ones are allowed to open their own online storefronts using the Ace name. |
#33
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![]() "Upscale" wrote in message ... "Leon" wrote in message years ago I thought I would never say this" a premium quality Wooster "foam" brush. And what prompted you to use a foam brush? Considering the poor reputation that many/most have as a finishing tool, why take the chance? Instructions on the can. And it specified a quality foam brush. |
#34
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On 7/24/2009 8:03 PM Leon spake thus:
"Upscale" wrote in message ... "Leon" wrote in message [...] years ago I thought I would never say this" a premium quality Wooster "foam" brush. And what prompted you to use a foam brush? Considering the poor reputation that many/most have as a finishing tool, why take the chance? Instructions on the can. And it specified a quality foam brush. Well, that's another thing that's so great about my old-fashioned varnish: It doesn't matter what kind of brush you use. Since the stuff flows out so nicely, one isn't required to get a 100% Mongolian yak-hair brush for $200, and use just the right length brush strokes. I do use a good brush (a nice ox-hair one), but so long as the brush doesn't shed bristles, you can use just about anything. As opposed to brushing lacquer, which totally depends on brush quality and brushing technique. I'm trying to finish furniture here, not achieve Zen satori with my brushing technique. -- Found--the gene that causes belief in genetic determinism |
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