![]() This finish is an eco-safe, non-toxic, VOC-free way for artists, designers, and crafters to get the weathered wood look they’d like to achieve for all their creative projects. Weathered Wood Finish™ works on indoor and outdoor projects.Īrtists, designers, and crafters have used Weathered Wood Finish™ on all sorts of wood projects, from interior design to theatrical set design and props, from furniture pieces to jewellery pieces, birdhouses and dollhouses. What are the recommended uses for Weathered Wood Finish™? It’s made from a proprietary mixture of naturally sourced materials, harvested and manufactured in accordance with sound environmental principles. Weathered Wood Finish™ is non-toxic, VOC free, environmentally friendly, children & animal friendly, garden, groundwater, & food safe. Is wood treated with Weathered Wood Finish™ safe? The staining effect gives a nice silver or silver-brown aged finish, depending on wood type, allowing artists designers and crafters to achieve a patina finish that enhances the natural beauty of wood. ![]() It also has naturally protective properties that increase the lifetime of the wood. It is perfect for giving your wood project the look it needs for a barnwood, rustic, or country home interior design. ![]() It is an easy-to-use wood stain that instantly gives wood a weathered, elegant aged look. Weathered Wood Finish™ is a product created specifically for artists, designers and crafters. Detailed instructions for application and use included in package.No waste, dry powder stores indefinitely.Mix only what you need, save the rest for another project (guide included).Apply with brush, roller, spray or by dipping.Proudly manufactured in Canada using sustainable resources.Leaves no harmful residue in soil or water.Works on indoor or outdoor projects - framing, fences, decks, siding, furniture, etc.Coverage: 1 Quart size provides minimum 100-140 square feet/ 9-12.5 sq meters of coverage, 3 Quart covers 300-420 sq ft/ 27-37.5 sq meters.As a bonus, Weathered Wood Finish provides effective protection against rot, moss, mold, and fungus. This product is similar to our Eco-Safe Wood Treatment, but is a concentrated formula with a special additive to enhance and deepen stain effect. They are comparing that dust film to the film that metal and other things get, talking about it like it's something more permanent than it actually is.Tall Earth Weathered Wood Finish is ideal for creating an aged driftwood appearance for many wood projects: This is the correct definition for the term "patina", but it can also be used in a kind of figurative sense, like when people say that something has a patina of dust. Actually I wonder if those poets and writers really know what it means themselves.īut, in reality it means closer to "a tarnish" and should only be used to describe semi-permanent coatings, like a metal patina. ![]() March 6, - Yeah, I've seen the word patina used a lot in literary fiction and in poetry, almost to the point where you don't realize they mean it metaphorically, and you start to think that the word just means "a coating". The patina always comes back though, so it's not really something to worry about. But I noticed, when I was traveling, if a blacksmith saw that it had that patina, he would take it (politely) and clean it in acid to get rid of the patina, because they really like to keep their metal bright. It gets dark in the engraved bits, making them stand out, which I really like, particularly as the raised bits stay bright. It was made by a local blacksmith who basically melted down some silver coins to make it. I have a handmade silver ring I got from when I was traveling around Africa. I actually really like the right kind of patina. Equally, I've acquired a few pieces of wood jewelry and I'm desperate to find a way to clean that filthy residue! Gawd only knows how much bacteria breeds on that garbage! I like my silver shiny, not filthy because people were too filthy-lazy to clean their goods. Patina is disgusting!! I bought a very old silver brooch from Peru and after a while of looking at that disgusting film, I gave it a hot bath with aluminum foil and baking soda (and I forgot what else, found it online) and gently scrubbed it with a brush: now it's brand spanking new and shiny!
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