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sanded old pine floor boards - what product to protect/finish with


intexasatthe moment

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I've used Osmo Polyx-Oil (Satin) http://www.osmouk.com/sitechapter.cfm?chapter=82&page=247#PolyxOil, looks great and hardwearing.

You'll need to buy a special brush cleaner and you can also get an application brush, all of which I bought from this place on Oglander Road...http://www.isouthwark.co.uk/profile/painting-and-decorating-supplies/15753/Marrs-Cross-and-Wilfrid-Fairbairns-Ltd.html

Worth having a chat with them as they specialise in hardwood flooring protection...

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Lovely ,I knew I'd get help on here !


Friend says she wants to keep them looking natural but "sort of enriched " .So I'm thinking she wants to achieve some kind of patina ( but not shiny ) added back .If that makes any sense .


Ultra - does that give a glossy finish ?


red devil - interesting .That was one of the ones that stood out for me when I googled .

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I used satin finish but it's not that reflective. Goes on very thin i.e. You don't need much of it to be protective as it seems to soak into the wood rather than sit on top.


I did some floors at work with yacht varnish and that really is like a layer sitting on top of the wood and they look pretty bad in comparison to the diamond glaze ones.

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Bonachem Mega acrylic matt or eggshell. It's super durable , odour free and easy to use, it's like a professional version of Dulux Diamond Glaze. Stir don't shake, apply with a paint pad not a brush (pads available at most good trade decorating shops, and B&Q on Old Kent Road). It dries in about 2 hrs, so easy to get a couple of coats on in 1 day.

Leave the 3rd coat until the next day or way towards the end of the first.


If you shake acrylic it makes bubbles, and when the bubbles dry they break into little dirt trapping craters. Pad finish eliminates micro peaks and troughs.


Don't wax them, as eventually the wax draws the dirt into the soft part of the woodgrain.


You can mop the floor as you would vinyl, once done

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You can make your own - get some proper turpentine and then heat in in a pan, in a second pan filled with water, and add lumps of bees wax.


You can seal first with acrylic and rub down with some fine sandpaper if you don't want to get dirt into the grain - I think it adds character though.


Mylands in West Norwood do a good range of wood finishes. www.mylands.co.uk


Or Whitten Timber in Peckahm stocks Osmo, although Catford may have better advice.

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I've put Osmo on floorboards in two different apartments. It's expensive, but great stuff. Application is straight forward, coverage is pretty much as it says on the tin. Needs to be re-done perhaps every two years. Also used it on kitchen worktop.
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