I've moved into an old 1900's flat which had 5 painted doors. These were sent away to be professionally stripped, as there must have been about 100 yeaars of paint on them...as well as lead paint...so off to the professionals they went.
The doors that came back were stunning. The original solid oak doors, in all their glory. I asked the guy who stripped them what the best thing to do was. His initial response was, don't paint them! This was not going to happen anyway.
He isn't keen on oils or stains. The oil can sometimes leak out the wood, and it can take a few applications to get the required look. Also, if you go one coat too many...you end up with a door that you don't like but have to put up with.
I detest varnish and stains in the main, so that wasn't going to happen.
He suggested wax. He suggested getting "Colron Refined Finishing Wax, Clear" to wax the doors. Got a tin and tried it...apply a thin layer of wax, with the grain. Buff off after 20 minutes and repeat. I have to say...they look bl00dy lovely to me! I guess I could add another coat of wax, to possibly take it a shade darker, but I might leave them as it is.
However, a couple of questions:
1. Is there anything special I need to do to the doors, now that they are waxed? Or, is it just a case of rubbing over them with a lint-free cloth?
2. How often to I need to re-apply the wax? Is it a yearly thing, twice yearly, monthly?
Someone had suggested leaving the top & bottom edges of the doors unwaxed, which I've done, to let the door breathe.
I'm also concerned about the joins themselves. I'm not a joiner and don't know a plane from a sander, but I'm concerned about areas of the door. The doors have two sections of wood going from top to bottom on each side. At the top, middle & bottom, these are joined by cross sections in, what I believe, are mortice & tenon joints...if that's right, top of the class for me!
At the top of the door--and I can't remember whether this is on the hinge side, or the handle side--it looks as though the side section is slightly away from the cross section...if that's making sense to anyone.
My question is, if you understood that, do I need to worry about it? Do I need to get a joiner to do something to it to fix it, or can I happily leave it?
The doors that came back were stunning. The original solid oak doors, in all their glory. I asked the guy who stripped them what the best thing to do was. His initial response was, don't paint them! This was not going to happen anyway.
He isn't keen on oils or stains. The oil can sometimes leak out the wood, and it can take a few applications to get the required look. Also, if you go one coat too many...you end up with a door that you don't like but have to put up with.
I detest varnish and stains in the main, so that wasn't going to happen.
He suggested wax. He suggested getting "Colron Refined Finishing Wax, Clear" to wax the doors. Got a tin and tried it...apply a thin layer of wax, with the grain. Buff off after 20 minutes and repeat. I have to say...they look bl00dy lovely to me! I guess I could add another coat of wax, to possibly take it a shade darker, but I might leave them as it is.
However, a couple of questions:
1. Is there anything special I need to do to the doors, now that they are waxed? Or, is it just a case of rubbing over them with a lint-free cloth?
2. How often to I need to re-apply the wax? Is it a yearly thing, twice yearly, monthly?
Someone had suggested leaving the top & bottom edges of the doors unwaxed, which I've done, to let the door breathe.
I'm also concerned about the joins themselves. I'm not a joiner and don't know a plane from a sander, but I'm concerned about areas of the door. The doors have two sections of wood going from top to bottom on each side. At the top, middle & bottom, these are joined by cross sections in, what I believe, are mortice & tenon joints...if that's right, top of the class for me!
At the top of the door--and I can't remember whether this is on the hinge side, or the handle side--it looks as though the side section is slightly away from the cross section...if that's making sense to anyone.
My question is, if you understood that, do I need to worry about it? Do I need to get a joiner to do something to it to fix it, or can I happily leave it?