That should clean up good.
What's your reason for applying shellac before the poly in this case?I think it’s come out pretty ok, still need to apply the shellac and some poly.
That should clean up good.
What's your reason for applying shellac before the poly in this case?I think it’s come out pretty ok, still need to apply the shellac and some poly.
Making the world a better place; one guitar at a time...
Hi Mcreed, after I scraped the CA and sanded the area, the finish in that area is not even and has gone in some sections back to the base wood. So my plan is I’ll reapply thin layers of the same dyed shellac to get it back to where it was, and then apply some wipe on poly to protect it. The shellac is a dark burgundy color so it’ll be easy to restore I think .
Ahh, I didn't know the shellac was tinted. That makes sense.
Look forward to seeing the result!
If you happen to be using oil based poly and alcohol based dye (presumably so if tinting the shellac) you can also just tint the poly to cover sand-throughs then go over it with clear poly to get your top coat. Kind of same same, but I thought I'd mention it!
Making the world a better place; one guitar at a time...
That’s looking great already, nice work Vivek!
FrankenLab
Hand crafting guitars, because Death Rays are expensive.
I was thinking you were going to do another clear coat all over now that the neck has been set. Maybe I misunderstood.Only thing is the area with the CA is a little shiny under light than the wood areas . I’ll try to build up the poly layer and hope it smoothies it out
Making the world a better place; one guitar at a time...
looking good ! once you you layer on a few more layers the light areas will tend to go away. That is what I found fixing similar issues.