Originally Posted by
Simon Barden
Hi and welcome. I'm doing my first Tru-Oil guitar at the moment, but I know that you are going to be applying many more coats of Tru-Oil to get a really good finish. The first few coats are going to sink well in, especially if you haven't applied a sanding sealer first. So it''s going to look rough and patchy.
I'd wait a day to allow any more sinkage to occur and the TO to harden a bit more, then give it a sand down and then apply more TO. For a flat shiny finish, you are going to need lots of coats of Tru-Oil, as each coat is very thin. Many of those you will mainly sand off again if you want a flat glossy finish, as you will be using the first load of coats just as fillers for the grain, so that you end up with a flat surface.
The Tru-Oil coats after that then go to form the protective layer. Even then, you'll need to sand back flat before you can polish it up to a good shine.