Rustication & sandblast "wet look"
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Rustication & sandblast "wet look"
Such as Dunhill's Shell finish when new. Equally shiny in the crevices as well as the high spots, almost as if they have been dipped or sprayed.
I can get an excellent and equally attractive (to my eye) "shine up" when refurbing them, but it is subtly different--slightly shinier on the high spots. Anyone here able to replicate the wet look?
I can get an excellent and equally attractive (to my eye) "shine up" when refurbing them, but it is subtly different--slightly shinier on the high spots. Anyone here able to replicate the wet look?
UFOs must be real. There's no other explanation for cats.
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That's what I figured, too, but hoped maybe you guys knew of a something like a polished-bristle nylon buffing wheel that's used at slow speeds. Some tricky gadget that had escaped me. Shellac always seemed like a shortcut, so I don't mess with it much. (Contrast stains is about it, then only as a color "freezer.")
Thanks.
Thanks.
UFOs must be real. There's no other explanation for cats.
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Truth be told, I have no idea what Dunhill uses. Could be the blood of baby seals for all I know.
There area few soft nylon brushes out there, but it always seemed to me that anything harder than a flannel buffing wheel would make a satin or matte finish rather than a shiny one. Best bet? Take a thick flannel wheel, turn the RPM down to 850 or so, and buff with rather hard pressure. It will get into all those nooks and crannies and shine them right up.
There area few soft nylon brushes out there, but it always seemed to me that anything harder than a flannel buffing wheel would make a satin or matte finish rather than a shiny one. Best bet? Take a thick flannel wheel, turn the RPM down to 850 or so, and buff with rather hard pressure. It will get into all those nooks and crannies and shine them right up.
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Not sure if it's right or not, but in cleaning up estate blasts I use the Halcyon II http://www.finepipes.com/Halcyon/halcyon.htm with a little Dremel 403 brush (nylon 1") that seems to work pretty well. Of course I run it on the slowest speed my Dremel will go.
Buffing a rough pipe will just work buffing compound into the crevices, which looks like poo. You can do that with a wax wheel, then hit it with a heat gun, but that will just give an even sheen, not a gloss. I would guess most factories spray whatever they use. I think Todd once posted that old shellac 78 records worked really well (crushed and dissolved in alcohol) for dark rusticated finishes.