Author Topic: Finish Work  (Read 2753 times)

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Offline NattyBumppo

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Finish Work
« on: December 21, 2013, 09:10:16 pm »
Hi All,
I am interested in ways you folks finish your bows after tillering.  Specifically sanding grits, hand sand or finish sanders, specialty or favorite tools for finishing and finally the finishes themselves.  If this has been covered in another thread just direct me.  I have just seen so many fine looking bows on this site that I am interested in making mine a little more "spit polished" :)  Thanks!
Natty

Offline osage outlaw

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Re: Finish Work
« Reply #1 on: December 21, 2013, 10:34:23 pm »
I usually hand sand down to 220 grit and then lightly burnish the bow with a piece of antler.  Tru-oil is my normal finish.  I pour a small amount into a gatorade bottle lid and then use a cosmetic wedge to apply around 8 coats or so.  To cut the shine of the tru-oil I'll put a coat of satin spray poly over it.  I tried a different hunting finish this year.  I put several coats of shellac on the bow and then two thin coats of straight TB3.  It worked very well. 
I started out with nothin' and I still got most of it left

Offline Mad Max

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Re: Finish Work
« Reply #2 on: December 21, 2013, 10:43:24 pm »
Natty
Hand sanding ONLY
I would rather fail trying to do something above my means, Than to succeed at something beneath my means.

Offline Danzn Bar

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Re: Finish Work
« Reply #3 on: December 21, 2013, 10:53:30 pm »
Yep I saw and put my hands on osage outlaws TBIII finish.  I think it looks good ......great... now only time will tell. :-\
DBar
Integrity is doing the right thing when no one is looking

Offline Weylin

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Re: Finish Work
« Reply #4 on: December 22, 2013, 12:13:30 am »
I progress with my sanding down to 600 grit. Then I put about 8 coats of tru-oil on with my finger, rubbing with 0000 steel wool between each coat. I then sand the final coat with 600 grit emery paper and water. That makes it silky smooth but dull. Then I make a slurry with pumice powder and oil and use a cloth to buff the finish back to a satin glow.

Offline Carson (CMB)

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Re: Finish Work
« Reply #5 on: December 22, 2013, 12:37:31 am »
I get tiller squared away with a cabinet scraper that leaves very little sanding work left to do.  I take it to 320 grit, wetting the wood and letting it dry between levels of grit.  Then seal and fill grain with shellac, linseed oil and 0000 pumice as a kind of french polish.  Once the grain is about leveled over, I start applying linseed oil and wax in alternating coats. 4-8 coats of each.  The wax is a blend of beeswax and douglas-fir rosin (refined pitch) that I make as a bow string wax.  I keep playing around with different homemade varnishes, but I always comeback to the linseed oil and wax in alternating coats.   
"The bow is the old first lyre,
the mono chord, the initial rune of fine art
The humanities grew out from archery as a flower from a seed
No sooner did the soft, sweet note of the bow-string charm the ear of genius than music was born, and from music came poetry and painting and..." Maurice Thompso

Offline wood_bandit 99

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  • Shoot straight my friends!!   55#@26"
Re: Finish Work
« Reply #6 on: December 22, 2013, 12:44:46 am »
I get tiller squared away with a cabinet scraper that leaves very little sanding work left to do.  I take it to 320 grit, wetting the wood and letting it dry between levels of grit.  Then seal and fill grain with shellac, linseed oil and 0000 pumice as a kind of french polish.  Once the grain is about leveled over, I start applying linseed oil and wax in alternating coats. 4-8 coats of each.  The wax is a blend of beeswax and douglas-fir rosin (refined pitch) that I make as a bow string wax.  I keep playing around with different homemade varnishes, but I always comeback to the linseed oil and wax in alternating coats.   

Same, minus the pumice and shellac. I sand until 800 grit then I take the finest steel wool and rub that on it then burnish it with a green stone I have that is SUPER smooth. I then hand rub linseed oil, about 6 coats, then do alternating coats of linseed and beeswax and rosin mixed also used as a bowstring wax. After about 6 more coats, 3 of each alternating coats, I rub with that stone and then if I hunt I just put that beeswax in my bag and rub it on whenever. When I am at my house I will do the alternating coats again. About every six coats I burnish it. Probably going to an extreme but it stays nice for a long time.
"Judge a man by his questions, not his answers" ~Anonymous

   "The person who says it cannot be done should not interrupt the person who is doing it." ~Chinese Proverb