I made several cutting boards for friends and relatives as Christmas
presents. When I delivered the boads (laminated strips of 1 inch hardwood )
they were a smooth as silk. In the couple weeks since, the boards have small
fibres sticking up that create a rough surface. (Probably from washing)
I have re-sanded a few and in just a couple minutes they are smooth again.
Question is: What can I do to esnure that once they are sanded they will
stay smooth?
Should I emerse the boards in water for a few minutes and sand when dry? Is
there a wood treatment that will work better?
This is my first time working with hardwood. Any tips are appreciated.
Thanks,
Peter
Hi Peter,
Did you treat them with mineral oil before delivery? If not the fuzz is normal
as water will raise the grain/fibres. Once sanded and oiled they should be ok
assuming their owners know enough not to soak then in the sink or dishwasher.
Cheers, JG
Novice wrote:
> I made several cutting boards for friends and relatives as Christmas
> presents. When I delivered the boads (laminated strips of 1 inch hardwood )
> they were a smooth as silk. In the couple weeks since, the boards have small
> fibres sticking up that create a rough surface. (Probably from washing)
>
> I have re-sanded a few and in just a couple minutes they are smooth again.
>
> Question is: What can I do to esnure that once they are sanded they will
> stay smooth?
>
> Should I emerse the boards in water for a few minutes and sand when dry? Is
> there a wood treatment that will work better?
>
> This is my first time working with hardwood. Any tips are appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Peter
Nope. Doesn't matter how you try, water will get in. Mineral oil or even
poly won't close all the new cuts and notches water can use. Best is to
remind folks of the inevitable, encourage them to use something like those
rough green 3M scrubbing gizmos to clean the surface, which will remove
particles originating from without or within.
BTW, check what detergent does to oils, and you'll find out about the
inevitable. Mineral oil never "cures."
"JGS" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi Peter,
> Did you treat them with mineral oil before delivery? If not the fuzz is
normal
> as water will raise the grain/fibres. Once sanded and oiled they should be
ok
> assuming their owners know enough not to soak then in the sink or
dishwasher.
> Cheers, JG
>
> Novice wrote:
>
> > I made several cutting boards for friends and relatives as Christmas
> > presents. When I delivered the boads (laminated strips of 1 inch
hardwood )
> > they were a smooth as silk. In the couple weeks since, the boards have
small
> > fibres sticking up that create a rough surface. (Probably from washing)
> >
> > I have re-sanded a few and in just a couple minutes they are smooth
again.
> >
> > Question is: What can I do to esnure that once they are sanded they will
> > stay smooth?
> >
> > Should I emerse the boards in water for a few minutes and sand when dry?
Is
> > there a wood treatment that will work better?
> >
> > This is my first time working with hardwood. Any tips are appreciated.
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > Peter
>
Scraping is better than sanding.
Take 'em back, scrape, oil, rub in.
Wilson
"Novice" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:LDMMb.77307$ts4.7082@pd7tw3no...
> I made several cutting boards for friends and relatives as Christmas
> presents. When I delivered the boads (laminated strips of 1 inch
hardwood )
> they were a smooth as silk. In the couple weeks since, the boards have
small
> fibres sticking up that create a rough surface. (Probably from washing)
>
> I have re-sanded a few and in just a couple minutes they are smooth again.
>
> Question is: What can I do to esnure that once they are sanded they will
> stay smooth?
>
> Should I emerse the boards in water for a few minutes and sand when dry?
Is
> there a wood treatment that will work better?
>
> This is my first time working with hardwood. Any tips are appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Peter
>
>
>
Folks,
Thanks for the responses. I didn't use mineral oil on them first. I
understand now that I should use 10 parts mineral oil to 1 part parafin wax.
heat in the mircowave until the wax melts and rub in vigorously.
Guess I'll go about recovering them all, scrape, sand and oil.
Future deliveries will include cutting board care instructions and some
mineral oil. My friends are all brilliant and don't need instructions, don't
know about my relatives....
Peter
"Novice" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:LDMMb.77307$ts4.7082@pd7tw3no...
> I made several cutting boards for friends and relatives as Christmas
> presents. When I delivered the boads (laminated strips of 1 inch
hardwood )
> they were a smooth as silk. In the couple weeks since, the boards have
small
> fibres sticking up that create a rough surface. (Probably from washing)
>
> I have re-sanded a few and in just a couple minutes they are smooth again.
>
> Question is: What can I do to esnure that once they are sanded they will
> stay smooth?
>
> Should I emerse the boards in water for a few minutes and sand when dry?
Is
> there a wood treatment that will work better?
>
> This is my first time working with hardwood. Any tips are appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Peter
>
>
>
On Tue, 13 Jan 2004 06:55:39 GMT, "Novice"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>I made several cutting boards for friends and relatives as Christmas
>presents. When I delivered the boads (laminated strips of 1 inch hardwood )
>they were a smooth as silk. In the couple weeks since, the boards have small
>fibres sticking up that create a rough surface. (Probably from washing)
>
>I have re-sanded a few and in just a couple minutes they are smooth again.
>
>Question is: What can I do to esnure that once they are sanded they will
>stay smooth?
>
>Should I emerse the boards in water for a few minutes and sand when dry? Is
>there a wood treatment that will work better?
>
>This is my first time working with hardwood. Any tips are appreciated.
>
>Thanks,
>
>Peter
>
When wood gets wet, it raises the grain. I've used this
technique--wet, allow to dry, sand, and repeat. The wood will raise
less and less with each cycle. Softwood does the same. When dry,
heat the board (120 degrees) and apply mineral oil and wip off the
excess.
"Novice" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:LDMMb.77307$ts4.7082@pd7tw3no...
> I made several cutting boards for friends and relatives as Christmas
> presents. When I delivered the boads (laminated strips of 1 inch
hardwood )
> they were a smooth as silk. In the couple weeks since, the boards have
small
> fibres sticking up that create a rough surface. (Probably from washing)
>
> I have re-sanded a few and in just a couple minutes they are smooth again.
>
> Question is: What can I do to esnure that once they are sanded they will
> stay smooth?
>
> Should I emerse the boards in water for a few minutes and sand when dry?
Is
> there a wood treatment that will work better?
>
> This is my first time working with hardwood. Any tips are appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Peter
I have made quite a few cutting boards, and I found that you can minimize,
if not eliminate, the fuzz. I glued up the most recent board from maple,
cherry and purpleheart, sanded to 220, and dunked it in water. After it
dried, I sanded again to 200 and dunked again. Once more of the same, and
then put mineral oil on it, once a day for a week, once a week for a month,
once a month for a year, and then again if the board gets resurfaced. I
have found that no matter whatm you still get raised ridges caused by knife
marks, and a little bit of fuzziness. It tends to go away when the board
dries out.
Jon E