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General Category => General Scroll Saw Talk => Topic started by: Artemisblossom on December 05, 2018, 12:03:17 am
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Hi I am starting to make some woodimals and I am not sure how or when to put a finish on them. I am making them out of 3/4" hardwoods (mostly maple) I would like to sand them and put some kind of varnish on them. Should I just put the finish on after the outside cuts are done before I actually cut out the puzzle pieces or should I put the finish on all areas after the puzzle pieces are cut out? I am using a #2 pegas blade for the inside cuts so they fit very snugly. I am afraid they will not fit if I put a stain and varnish finish on them. Also should I just be sanding the outside edges?
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I use dressed lumber,a #3 Modified Geometry Blade, sand,oil finish such as Watco Danish clear or tung oil. I pour a small amount of oil into a Ziploc bag and dip the pieces , usually one at a time, and remove, wipe of the excess and let dry checking in 20 minutes or so and wipe any pooling especially on the edges. If I need to do a second coat it would be on the sides and probably not the edges.
occasionally I paint them with water thinned acrylic paint and only one coat on the edges then seal only the sided with oil.
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Thank you I will try the tung oil
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I use beeswax and mineral oil definitely child safe cut all my 3/4 puzzles with#5 fd ur
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do you dip it in the mineral oil first let it dry and then rub the beeswax on it?
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Here is a youtube clip on making a mineral oil and beeswax finish. Generally I will use one part mineral oil to 3 or 4 parts beeswax. https://www.toymakingplans.com/website/how-to/non-toxic-wood-toy-finish.html
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Here is a youtube clip on making a mineral oil and beeswax finish. Generally I will use one part mineral oil to 3 or 4 parts beeswax. https://www.toymakingplans.com/website/how-to/non-toxic-wood-toy-finish.html
Thanks for the link to the video. I just finished watching it and now am wondering, could you use it in the liquid form to get into some of the small areas that a brush or paper towel don't get into???
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Barb, I have found that it will fill those tight areas pretty well, as it does tend to soften as you rub it on, I use my fingers to start, and then use a paper towel to clean up any excess.
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Barb, I also use tung oil on some of my puzzles, as mineral oil never cures very well. Scott Seifer had a good youtube on his wordimal puzzles. Here is the link to his channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrcQ1TitDtz-ViCOg1RUN8Q. I tried to find the clip on his shop, Steve Good might have it on his blog still, it was a clip from sometime in 2017 as I remember.
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Barb, I also use tung oil on some of my puzzles, as mineral oil never cures very well. Scott Seifer had a good youtube on his wordimal puzzles. Here is the link to his channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrcQ1TitDtz-ViCOg1RUN8Q. I tried to find the clip on his shop, Steve Good might have it on his blog still, it was a clip from sometime in 2017 as I remember.
I have watched the Scott Seifer video before. He just uses mineral oil and admits in one of the videos that it never fully cures, but has had no complaints.