[pianotech] Finish on finish

Douglas Gregg classicpianodoc at gmail.com
Sun Nov 7 08:14:36 MST 2010


Hi,
 I routinely freshen up finishes on old pianos by using French polishing
technique. Specifically, I use Konig brand French polish. If a piano is
lightly crazed (ground glass appearance) it can be French polished to a high
gloss with no other treatment. If it is deeper as with an orange peel
finish, I sand it with 400 grit wet or dry paper with a thin mineral oil
lubricant. Then I clean off the oil with some mineral spirits and French
polish it. It does not have to be perfectly smooth before French polishing.
It takes two or three polishing sessions for deeply crazed pianos. Give it
several days between sessions for the shellac to completely dry. It will
show some of the crazing when the first session drys but that will fill in
after the second or third session. The beauty of French polish is that it is
rubbed on with a pad that only fills depressions without adding finish to
the high spots. This levels the finish very effectively.

 I have followed these pianos for years and have found it to be very
effective. The other nice feature is that it can be refreshed easily with
the same polishing method if there are new scratches or other damage. I
almost never strip a piano in my shop. This strips out all the original
factory effort to fill the grain and even out  the color.
The only defect that is hard to French polish out, is fine alligator
cracking of finish that goes through the full thickness of the finish. This
defect is more commonly seen in a piano that has been resprayed with lacquer
over an old finish. I think it is due to differential shrinkage of the less
than compatible finishes. It will finally lead, in the worst cases, to large
flakes of the finish coming off. There is not much that can be done with
such a finish except to attempt to stabilize the flaking with a tung oil
varnish such as Formby's tung oil. Otherwise, it has to be stripped.

I teach French polishing to the local guild members and others in my area.
It is nearly a lost art with tremendous effectiveness and great earning
power.  Customers often ask me to French polish their antiques after they
see what it can do on their piano.

Douglas Gregg
Classic Piano Doc
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