Strip and Refinish shellac
If you want to strip the old piano finish
without removing patina, then the gentle method is the
way. This is only for pianos that have original finish
and no paint over
that.
The old finish is shellac. It will melt off with denatured
alcohol or methanol. I will tell you my old method. Slop
methanol on the surface liberally with a brush. Cover the
surface with waxed paper from the grocery store. Leave it until
the finish has softened (10-15 min.). The old finish can be
shoveled off with a plastic spatula or squeegee. When it is
clean you can wet it further and keep cleaning it off with rags
saturated in methanol.
You do not want to remove all the finish but only the top
several coats. The bottom coat must stay so don't keep putting
fresh solvent on after it is mostly clean. I do not like steel
wool as it leaves tiny rust spots inside new finishes many
times, as it breaks off tiny metal
pieces. Use green pad Scotch brite or the
cheaper ones found at Oriental grocery stores.
At the point when it is clean of thick coats of shellac I dry
it, do a fine sanding and go back with new orange or "Amber"
shellac, as they now call it. Once the color of the wood is as
dark as you want it, then change to clear shellac. Behlen makes
some very nice "blonde" shellac flakes. That is the best clear
I have found. The best way to buy shellac is in flake form and
mix it yourself with methanol. (It has to sit overnight to
dissolve the flakes.)
Once you begin working with shellac you will come to prefer it.
Once you get a good buildup of shellac you can French polish it
to the original mirror finish. It will then be as it was
originally.
French polish is not a substance but a technique. The
ingredients are shellac, solvent, and linseed oil and most
important--the right rag.
This stripping technique will be slower than the big commercial
methods. However, you avoid the bleaching, washing, staining,
and sealing steps so it is often faster than what everyone has
been brainwashed into doing by the big chemical companies.
By the way, if methanol does not strip fast enough you may mix
50-50 methanol and lacquer thinner and get your basic gentle
but slightly stronger stripper. The old guys used to also add
some acetone if the finish was particularly stubborn. And
they would shave blocks of paraffin into it to make the paste
type for slower dry time
Doug L. Bullock, Originally written in 1998
updated 2009 Copyright 1998-2009
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