TonyFrancis wrote:
Most all steel and gut strings makers were using natural resin spirit finishes before the intoduction of nitrocellulose in the late 1920s.
Martin, Gibson, Knutsen, Weissenborn, Larson Brothers, Washburn and countless others.
As per your comment about spirit vanishes being too soft... perhaps it is time you did some reasearch and started to experiment a little. Some commercial finishes are soft, but this is where old knowlege (from old craftsmen and books) comes into play, and making a specific finish with specific qualities for its intended purpose.
Tony, at the risk of arguing… The pre-nitro Martin guitars I've seen exhibit no trace of resins or gums in the finish. Pure shellac it is. Maybe those were freaks? I don't know. There is no difference between refined and crude shellac. After adding alcohol strain it to get rid of the impurities, let the wax sit on the bottom of the can and keep the "pure" shellac. You can buy the crudiest shellac and refine it on you kitchen table. The clearer colours like blonde are obtained with bleaching at the factory level. As far as I know Martin used a blonde, refined shellac no different from what we can find today. Again that's based on a few guitars going through my shop, those maybe exceptions…
Requirements for violin and guitar finishes are completely different. I persist and say that all violin spirit and oil varnishes I've seen are too soft for the guitar, period. A "hard" varnish for a violin maker is still too soft for a guitar. Maybe one needs to look somewhere else though, I am not going to try all artisan, floor or furniture finishes out there, it's a waste of time.
I settled on Belhen Rockhard after many trials, failures and half-successes. It fills all I expect from a guitar finish for now and so far it's been exactly the same thing in the can, can after can.
I am not 100% sure but I could swear factories were already spraying finishes in the 20's and before.
Experimenting I did, do and will always do. May I ask where you get your information? Do you make your own spirit varnish? If so please share with us, seriously.
Rick Turner wrote:
Behlen's instrument varnish is a pretty good spirit varnish. You can brush it or spray it. You could probably pad it if you thinned it enough.
Rick, this is what I now use as a sealer before the Rockhard. It works great and is very transparent. It needs to be thinned around 50/50 to be sprayed, as it comes out of the bottle quite thick, almost like honey. It is too soft for a final finish on the guitar though, after 2 days of curing at 68º/45% humidity lightly pressing my nail still leaves a mark.