Recently I completed some guitars using Kusmi button lac from Homestead Finishing Supplies. I have let a number of players play them, from inside an air-conditioned room to outside on a shady deck in the summer. There was some perspiration involved in the outside session. The French polished button lac has held up admirably with no imprinting or dulling.
In working with the button lac, it did seem harder than the blonde flakes I had been using (please no Blonde jokes!). When I was doing the final abrasive polish with Novus #2, the shine came up quickly and it has remained bright.
Prior to mid-20th Century, all shellac was handmade, as far as I know. Handmade shellac is processed by melting the seedlac in a cotton bag next to a charcoal fire and wringing the bag to squeeze out the molten shellac resin. The usual, contemporary way of processing seedlac these days is by solvent extraction. There is a picture of handmade shellac and button lac manufacture
here.
As you can see in the upper photo, the molten shellac is stretched by hand into thin sheets which are then borken up into the flakes we are familiar with. The second photo shows button lac being poured on a metal sheet for hardening.
I have always been impressed with the finishes on old American guitars like early Martins and Washburns, etc. Most of these guitars I have seen have been played a good bit and the original finish still looks good. Even better than a cellulose finish from the 1940's with the same amount of playing. From what I can gather, early Martins (pre-nitro) were finished with orange shellac and the Lyon & Healy guitars from the same era apprear to be shellac as well. The shellac used to finish these early guitars would have been heat processed, which was the usual way to process shellac prior to cheap solvents becoming available.
So far my results with button lac have indicated that heat processing is an important consideration in determining the durabilty of a French polished guitar. I have used button lac as it is the only shellac I know of that is definitely heat processed. There may be some handmade shellacs available that are heat processed, but none of the standard suppliers I know of carry handmade shellacs. Getting the wax out of button lac can be problematic. I have solved this by placing the broken up buttons inside a coffee filter, tying with string and dropping the "teabag" into a jar with the right amount of alcohol. It takes about 3-4 weeks to fully dissolve the lac inside the filter. After this amount of time, I remove the filter and put it in another jar. More shellac will continue to drain out of the filter. Do not squeeze the filter in an effort to get more shellac out. You will just squeeze more wax out of the bag. After the bag as shed all its liquid in the second jar, you can add the liquid to the first jar and in a week or so, the wax that managed to get through the filter will settle to the bottom of the jar. Interestingly, the level of the wax in the bottom of the jar drops with dewaxed shellac being drawn off the top. I use an eye dropper for that process, being careful not to agitate the jar.
I am putting this info on the Forum in hopes that others who are dedicated French polishers will test my theory about heat processed shellac and post their results here as well.
Tom