As always, preparation is all important. So many people fail with their project because they don’t spend time on preparation. Any surface you want to paint, varnish or stain must have a huge amount of time spent on the preparation.
Preparation is not very sexy. It’s hard work with very little to show for it. But unless you want to see your varnish, paint or stain, lift, bubble or look all mottled, then you will put a lot of elbow grease into your preparation.
What Preparation Do I Need To Do?
First of all, take a good look at the piece of furniture you want to varnish or stain. You must get rid of all the old finish. To do this you need to decide on the stripper and stripping of your choice.
What sort of surface do you have? Is it painted or varnished? Perhaps this is where some professional advice would be most helpful. Strippers come in all sizes and containers and some work well with paint and others with varnish/stains. Have the right sort of stripper.
To determine the correct stripper and method best suited for your project, refer to your hardware guy. Another choice that may be available to you – depending on where you are located, is to have your piece of furniture dipped into a chemical bath to have the previous finish completely removed. This is a process that should only be handled by a professional facility.
Don’t attempt this yourself… remember SAFETY FIRST. These strong chemicals require breathing apparatus and safety gear that the average do-it-yourselfer just doesn’t own. Trying to do it yourself could and most likely would, end up with a severe chemical reaction and perhaps death… YOURS.
Get a dedicated brush for your varnish work. Any old brush will not work, especially if it loses hair/bristles or has remnants of old paint. Going cheap on a brush to do your varnishing means that your finished work will have hairs and pieces of dried paint marring the surface. Get yourself a good quality brush for varnishing.
Once the surface is completely stripped and allow to dry, sand it over with a fine grade of sandpaper and refer back to the section in this blog on unfinished furniture. Then continue on from there.
Hope this helps.. I do have a couple of other suggestions for reference material I’ve found helpful..
Staining and Finishing Unfinished Furniture and Other
cheers
Paul

