Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted (edited)

Hi All - I have been finishing the oak tops with the 3068 natural version of the Osmo Top Oil however it seems to go on quite different to the normal satin/matt version. I'm applying it with a brush and rubbing the excess off after a few mins. Because this seems to be a very differnet oil it feels like more coats are needed. Just wondering if anyone out there has any experince with these oils.

 

Oak tops. Initially sanded to 150. Applied two coats 12 hrs apart, then rubbed down with 240 before applying a third coat. Forth applied same as third. 

 

Cheers, Paul

Edited by paro
Posted

Not quite the same but have just painted 14 flush plywood internal doors with black Osmo Oil stain.

I did 3 coats, first 2 applied with a 4" roller and sanded with 320.

Top coat applied very liberally with lint free cloth wrapped around a hand pad holder, Osmo do a fleece, link below.

https://www.wood-finishes-direct.com/product/osmo-hand-applicator-fleece?sid=1&s=3970027-c23026905f54b60afc435908c3958a1f&r=10&p=1

 

Have you noticed any white pigment in the 3068?

Posted

Thanks Nestor. The white pigment does seem to settle anywhere there is a little grain or its a bit rougher due to imperfections like knots, I've epoxied anything large but didn't apprecaite how little it needs to settle and catch in smaller gaps. Overall I really like the look but that does spoil it a bit in places. I think the mistake I've made was not spending more time getting the rough factory belt sanding out so there are some deeper scratches that pick up the pigment. 

 

 

 

signal-2025-12-23-064759.jpeg

signal-2025-12-23-064759_002.jpeg

signal-2025-12-23-064759_003.jpeg

Posted

Instead of sanding (which picks up the fibres) finish by scraping. I use a Stanley (other brands are available) type knife blade and drag along the surface, incline blade slightly towards direction of travel. A few strokes and you will feel the surface is very smooth. You will probably find most of the “whiting” will scrape off as you remove the “fluffy” grain patches

Posted

I installed similar worktops in 2006, very pleased with them. The final surface was a smooth as glass. 

Once in use the minor blemishes will hopefully become less relevant.

Easy to maintain, every couple of years I would rub down with wire wool / sandpaper and reapply with a cloth.

I did test the 3068 but found the white pigment interfered with  the actual colour of the wood, this was a few years back. 

 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...