- Joined
- May 16, 2005
- Messages
- 3,540
- Likes
- 19
Sort of in line with the gag by Odie, I recall an article in an old Fine Woodworking issue dealing with potatoes and wood. The spoon carver profiled was a Scandanavian sort, and he used the starch of a boiled potatoe (for those who remember a certain US vice-president) to seal the endgrain on his green-carved spoons. I tried it on some of mine, though I had never had much problem with splitting on spoons, and it seemed to work. Theory says that starch would love the water and get into the pores of the wood, helping slow the evaporation. Substitute for anchorseal, don't know. I don't need either, having a basement and places with higher relative humidity to store fresh blanks. Those with wood, worries, and no anchorseal might give it a whirl.