cedar bowl finish

Signed-In Members Don't See This Ad
See more from LEAP

Signed-In Members Don't See This Ad

fiferb

Member
Joined
Mar 20, 2006
Messages
2,440
Location
Ninety Six, SC, USA.
I think even if you didn't put a finish on it the smell would diminish over short period of time. Then you'd have to use some sandpaper to expose fresh wood to renew the smell.
 

Fred

Member
Joined
Feb 18, 2007
Messages
3,557
Location
N.E. Atlanta, Georgia U.S.A.
If you know someone in the medical profession you might get them to obtain a bottle of Cedar oil for you. I have no idea what the medical profession used Cedar oil for, but somewhere along the way someone told me t was used to make pills.

I have a pint bottle from my father's stuff. He used it to add the Cedar smell to walk in closets he built 40 years ago. A drop or two on the Cedarwood was all he used. The smell is just s "fresh" now as back then.
 

redfishsc

Member
Joined
Feb 11, 2006
Messages
2,545
Location
North Charleston , SC
The smell will go away, the speed of the vanishing will depend on how many knots you have in the bowl. The smell is particularly strong around knot holes, apparently because of resin content being so high in a knot.

My personal opinion on cedar: finish like you would any other bowl and let the beauty of the wood (of which there is PLENTY in cedar) shine through.

A bowl that is only sorta-finished will eventually lose it's smell, and in a year you will have a non-cedar smelling bowl that looks like it needs a finish on it.
 

LEAP

Member
Joined
Dec 22, 2006
Messages
1,938
Location
Old Orchard Beach, Maine
Thanks folks, I decided to give it a tung oil finish and wax buff. It darkened a bit but still looks interesting. Next one I'll try lacquer to see if it will hold it's color.
 

toolcrazy

Member
Joined
Dec 23, 2006
Messages
5,408
Location
Port Orchard, WA
Thanks folks, I decided to give it a tung oil finish and wax buff. It darkened a bit but still looks interesting. Next one I'll try lacquer to see if it will hold it's color.

I think the only way to stop Cedar from changing color is a UV protected finish and even then, it will still change. The red always turns brown.
 
Top Bottom