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Should I have used sanding sealer?

Joined
Jan 13, 2018
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Location
Fairview Heights, IL
I watched Mick Hanbury use Jo Sonja paints on youtube and decided to give it a try. I used White Ash as that's all I had on hand and I'm curious if I should have used sanding sealer on the top before using the ebonizing laquer to minimize some of the grain pattern underneath the paint or was it just a poor choice of wood to try this on? I'm still happy with the outcome for a first try, just seeing on how to improve.
67867403282__0CE1C31E-19A4-4034-B824-5DC750D00913.jpg
Thanks,

Tim
 
Joined
May 19, 2019
Messages
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Location
Cobden, IL
I watched Mick Hanbury use Jo Sonja paints on youtube and decided to give it a try. I used White Ash as that's all I had on hand and I'm curious if I should have used sanding sealer on the top before using the ebonizing laquer to minimize some of the grain pattern underneath the paint or was it just a poor choice of wood to try this on? I'm still happy with the outcome for a first try, just seeing on how to improve.
View attachment 45506
Thanks,

Tim
Nice piece Tim. Perhaps you could take a piece of scrap and apply both ways to see if it makes a difference?
Pat
 
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Feb 26, 2019
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Grain pattern establishes a piece as authentic wood rather than a photographic reproduction on synthetic material. Let the wood grain dignify your work.
Agree with this.

If you want a smooth surface, use tight grain wood. FYI sanding sealer would take many many coats and sanding back to fill the grain. When you want to fully fill grain like ash/oak use a pore filler.

Nice work!
 
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Grain pattern establishes a piece as authentic wood rather than a photographic reproduction on synthetic material. Let the wood grain dignify your work.
Absolutely agree ! That why I turn! Seeing the beauty of the grain ! Thanks
 

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