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12 Finishing Tips
Good finishers
have lots of tricks
up their sleeves.
Here’s a handful
from Bob Flexner,
one of the nation’s
foremost experts.
By Bob Flexner
1. Add depth by glazing 
Glazing accentuates the three-dimensional 
look of moldings, carvings, turnings, and raised 
panels. A glaze is simply a thickened pigmented 
stain—thickening it reduces runs on vertical surfaces. 
Gel stain works well as a glazing material.
 
Glazing is always done over a sealed surface, 
meaning over at least one coat of finish. After 
the first (or second) coat of finish has thoroughly 
dried, wipe or brush on the glaze. Allow the 
solvent to evaporate so the glaze dulls. Then 
wipe off most of the glaze using a rag or brush, 
leaving some of the glaze in the recessed areas 
of your project.
 
After the glaze has dried, apply at least one 
additional coat of finish. This prevents the glaze 
from being rubbed or scratched off. Never leave 
glaze thick; the finish won’t bond well to it. 
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2. Clean brushes with lacquer thinner 
The standard procedure for cleaning a varnish brush is to rinse 
it a couple of times in mineral spirits, and then wash repeatedly 
in soap and water. I take an extra step: After the mineral spirits, 
I rinse my brush in lacquer thinner. Commercial brush cleaner 
works well, too.
 
Lacquer thinner or brush cleaner quickly removes most of the 
oily mineral spirits. This step makes washing with soap and water 
easier and quicker. You’ll usually need only one or two soap-andwater 
washings to achieve a good lather, which indicates the bristles 
are clean. 
Remember to use adequate ventilation when you work with 
lacquer thinner or brush cleaner. 
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3. Keep everything clean 
Reduce dust nibs by keeping your 
project and work area clean. If you 
are finishing in the same area 
where you’ve been sanding, 
allow time for the dust to 
settle and then vacuum 
the floor. Vacuum your 
project using the brush 
attachment. Use a lint-free 
cloth to remove any dust that 
remains in the wood’s pores.
 
Just before you begin brushing 
or spraying, wipe your hand 
over horizontal surfaces to be sure 
they are clean. You will feel dust you 
don’t see. Your hand will also pick up 
small bits of dust that may have settled 
after you did the major cleaning. 
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4. Bury raised grain 
Water-based stain and finish raise wood fibers, making 
the wood’s surface feel rough. Many folks suggest 
prewetting bare wood with water and sanding the 
raised grain after the wood dries. This method is fairly 
effective, but there’s an easier way.
 
Skip the prewetting and bury the raised grain in the finish. 
Burying simply means encasing the raised grain in a 
layer of finish. Apply the first coat of water-based finish 
and then sand it smooth, raised grain and all.
 
You can use the same approach with a water-based 
stain, which also raises the grain. The stained surface 
may become rough, but don’t sand the stain. Apply one 
coat of finish and then sand. Be careful not to cut through 
the finish into the stain. 
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5. Ebonize with black dye 
The easiest way to make any wood resemble 
ebony is with black dye. Unlike pigment, which is 
the colorant used in paint, dye has transparent 
properties. You can make wood as black as you 
want and still see the figure of the wood through 
the dye. I prefer to use walnut when ebonizing 
because its grain is similar to that of real ebony.
 
Dyes come in many forms. I prefer to use powdered 
water-soluble dyes because they offer more 
time to wipe off the excess. If the wood doesn’t 
become black enough with one coat, make a more 
intense color or apply one or more extra coats. 
Allow the dye to dry between coats.
 
  
Source  
Tools for Working Wood, toolsforworkingwood.com, 800-426-4613, Lockwood water-based 
ebony black dye, 1 oz., #LW-WMIS.327. 
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6. Reveal flaws in reflected light 
Something is bound 
to go wrong when you 
brush or spray. You may 
get runs, drips, spills, 
skips, orange peel—you 
know the list. The trick 
is to spot these problems 
in time to correct 
them. Reflected light is 
the answer.
 
As you finish, move your head so you can see the surface 
in a reflection of an overhead light, a window, a handheld 
light or a light on a stand. The reflection’s shiny surface 
will show you the exact condition of the finish. 
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7. Find dried glue 
Dried glue causes spotting when you apply a stain or finish. 
Most glue dries clear, though, so how can you tell where 
it is? Water or mineral spirits reveal all.
 
Before a final sanding, wet the entire surface with water 
or, if you have adequate ventilation, with mineral spirits. This 
will make the wood darker, but glue drips, spills and fingerprints 
will be easily identifiable because they’ll appear as a 
light color. How does this work? Glue seals the wood’s surface. 
Water or mineral spirits won’t penetrate the glue spots, 
so those spots won’t become as dark as the rest of the wood.
 
Water will soften dried glue, making it easier to remove 
with a card scraper or a chisel. You can also wash off glue by 
scrubbing with a rag and hot water. When you’ve removed 
the glue, sand with the highest grit of sandpaper you used 
on the rest of the project. 
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8. Spray unseen parts first 
Spray the less seen and less touched parts of 
your project first. Spray the most important surfaces 
last. This way, overspray will land on parts where it 
really won’t matter.
 
Overspray is the mist that bounces off an object 
or sometimes misses the object altogether. The 
mist floats in the air and eventually lands somewhere, 
often back on the project itself. Overspray 
makes surfaces it lands on feel rough.
 
Here’s how to proceed on a table or chair. Spray a 
table’s legs and rails before its top. Turn a chair upside 
down and spray the insides of the legs and insides 
and bottom sides of the stretchers. Stand the chair 
upright and spray the legs’ outsides and the stretchers’ 
tops and outsides. Finish by spraying the backside 
of the chair back, the arms and finally the front 
side of the back and the seat. 
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9. Sand more on end grain 
End grain can turn very dark 
when stained. More often 
than not, the problem is that 
the end grain is still somewhat 
rough from sawing. The 
same sanding procedure that 
you used on the rest of your 
project is often inadequate to 
prepare end grain for staining.
 
To remove saw marks, 
begin sanding end grain with 
a coarser paper than you are 
using on the side grain. An 
80-grit sandpaper is usually 
coarse enough. When you have made the end grain 
smooth with this grit, work up through the grits just 
as you do with side grain, finishing with the same grit 
you used to finish-sand the side grain.
 
You can make sanding any end grain easier by sealing 
it with thinned glue or finish before you begin sanding. 
Thin a white or yellow glue with about three parts 
water. Thin any finish by about half with the appropriate 
solvent. Both methods stiffen the fibers, making them 
easier to cut off with the sandpaper. 
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10. Reduce blotching in pine 
Staining pine can be a risky business. Some 
stains cause pine to look blotchy with irregular 
light and dark areas. Wood conditioners 
are widely used to reduce 
blotching prior to staining. 
For pine, though, using 
gel stain is far easier, 
more effective 
and more 
predictable 
than applying 
wood conditioner 
for achieving the 
intensity of color 
you desire.
 
In my 
experience, 
gel stain is 
not as effective 
at reducing 
blotching on hardwoods, 
such as cherry, 
birch, maple or poplar. For 
these woods, use a wood conditioner 
before staining. 
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11. Let wood conditioner dry thoroughly 
Wood conditioners eliminate blotching much better when they’re allowed 
to dry thoroughly. I believe the drying times recommended by manufacturers 
should be lengthened.
 
The directions for most solvent-based wood conditioners instruct you to 
stain within 2 hours of application. These conditioners are actually a varnish, 
which takes at least 6 to 8 hours to dry in a warm room. It’s better to wait 
overnight before you apply stain.
 
Most cans of water-based wood conditioners say you can stain 30 minutes 
after applying the conditioner. I think you should wait at least 2 hours. 
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12. Thin the finish for better leveling 
Thinning a finish reduces brush marks and orange peel, which are two common problems 
when you’re brushing or spraying. If the finish is thin enough, you can entirely eliminate 
these defects.
 
Use the appropriate thinner to thin the finish. Begin by thinning about 10 percent. Thin 
more, if needed, to achieve better leveling. For water-based finishes, it’s best to use the 
manufacturer’s “flow additive” to thin the finish. Adding a little water may help somewhat, 
but if you add too much, the finish will bead on the surface.
 
All finishes can be thinned. Sometimes instructions say not to thin a finish, but this is 
done to comply with EPA volatile organic compound (VOC) laws so less solvent evaporates 
into the atmosphere. No harm is done to the finish if it is thinned. Thinning does 
make a finish more likely to run on a vertical surface and to build at a slower rate, however. 
You may have to apply more coats than usual. 
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