I'm trying to teach myself how to varnish. I have a lot of teak on my boat exterior i want to varnish, so thought i would start with some simple projects to get the hang of it.
I bought a liter of Le Tonkinois Original varnish a decided to start with my cockpit table. I sanded the table to 400 grit, smooth finish, cleaned it well and applied three coats so far sanding between each coating. From a couple feet away the finish looks amazing. I'm really impressed so far, however if you look at the finish at an angle in the light, there are countless little tiny what look like microbubbles evenly disbursed over the entire finish. Its not settling dust, i noticed the formation of them immediately after i 'tipped' the surface. It almost looks like micro air bubbles like you see in some epoxy coatings rising to the surface while it cures. Im using a decent synthetic brush but certainly not a great brush. Its probably a $15-20 Home Depot 'Purdy' brush. I'm working in 75degree low humidity shop, perfect conditions.
I tried taking a picture of the surface but its really hard to see what im talking about from the pics. The camera males it look more like pinholes. Is this problem common and due to using the wrong brush or technique, or is this common for this particular varnish? I have seen pics from people who use this varnish and their surface looks like glass. I dont really need a perfect glass finish, especially for a cockpit table, but i'd like to get it a little better for the exterior teak.
Thanks for any insights.
I bought a liter of Le Tonkinois Original varnish a decided to start with my cockpit table. I sanded the table to 400 grit, smooth finish, cleaned it well and applied three coats so far sanding between each coating. From a couple feet away the finish looks amazing. I'm really impressed so far, however if you look at the finish at an angle in the light, there are countless little tiny what look like microbubbles evenly disbursed over the entire finish. Its not settling dust, i noticed the formation of them immediately after i 'tipped' the surface. It almost looks like micro air bubbles like you see in some epoxy coatings rising to the surface while it cures. Im using a decent synthetic brush but certainly not a great brush. Its probably a $15-20 Home Depot 'Purdy' brush. I'm working in 75degree low humidity shop, perfect conditions.
I tried taking a picture of the surface but its really hard to see what im talking about from the pics. The camera males it look more like pinholes. Is this problem common and due to using the wrong brush or technique, or is this common for this particular varnish? I have seen pics from people who use this varnish and their surface looks like glass. I dont really need a perfect glass finish, especially for a cockpit table, but i'd like to get it a little better for the exterior teak.
Thanks for any insights.
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