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Zebra Wood Finish

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7.4K views 19 replies 10 participants last post by  Knothead47  
#1 ·
I "think" the wood I made this sign out of is Zebra Wood. All I know is I LOVED carving this wood.

But, I need to finish it. The sign will be hung in our kitchen so no outside elements will be involved.

I have a couple questions:

1) Can I use acrylic paint to paint the carved out letters? I don't want to paint the wood, but the words are not legible unless you are standing in front of the sign.

2) What is the best finish to use? I've read that Tung Oil is good. But I have never used this. One guy says shellac. Again, I've never used this.

I'm hoping to get a nice finish that will last for a while before it needs touching up.

Any and all feedback is greatly appreciated.
 

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#2 ·
Frank
Shellac has a warm color to it Tung oil is lighter lacquer is the clearest. Nice looking sign I hope you have some scrap left so you can try before you buy. Very nice looking sign
 
#3 ·
Thanks for the compliment Bill.......I wish I had some left over. That is the whole piece of wood. We bought it to fit right where she wants it to go.
 
#8 ·
John, I am leaning towards a beige to match the walls in our kitchen. We thought about black.....and have not ruled it out.

Thanks.
 
#9 ·
Should have said acrylic paint in the color of your choice. I just think black when I hear zebra - and I have a quart of it.

HJ
 
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#12 ·
Sorry I can't contribute Frank , but just wanted to say that wood grain looks awesome and I'm sure looking forward too seeing the finished product
 
#14 ·
UPDATE......

We went with an off-white-biege color for the letters. It very closely matched her curtains.

I still need to put the key hole slots in the back to hang it.

We are gonna wait on sealing it for now. Being inside, the smell of the finish.....if the shellac has a smell.....could affect my asthma.

I cut everything with my 1/8" flat bottom carbide bit. I cut it at full depth in 1 cutting.....about 1/4" deep.
 

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#20 ·
We had a demo at the recent meeting of our turning club. The fellow was showing how to paint turnings. One piece used acrylic paint. Looked great! The only thing is it takes a while to dry as opposed to other paints he had. BTW, he used fingerpaints, too.
Let's see the sign after you decide what you use.