mmayo
Member
I apologize twice that this might be old news or in the wrong section, but sanding sealer is my new best friend.
I bought this can to seal a vintage bass guitar and fill the grain. The luthier asked me to sand down the body and apply sealer until the body was smooth and well sealed. The can stayed idle until I moved and I used it as a first coat on some small projects. The results were great and I cut my number of coats in half and still achieved the same results. I tried a Mylands product on wood pens once and got tons of white dust in the grain. It could not be removed or sanded out so I stopped using it. This stuff is far cheaper, works and leaves dust that blows off easily. I just coated this huge project with it. The grain popped immediately.
My wooden pens may get some when I have the time to let the turned blank sit overnight after applying the sealer.

I bought this can to seal a vintage bass guitar and fill the grain. The luthier asked me to sand down the body and apply sealer until the body was smooth and well sealed. The can stayed idle until I moved and I used it as a first coat on some small projects. The results were great and I cut my number of coats in half and still achieved the same results. I tried a Mylands product on wood pens once and got tons of white dust in the grain. It could not be removed or sanded out so I stopped using it. This stuff is far cheaper, works and leaves dust that blows off easily. I just coated this huge project with it. The grain popped immediately.

My wooden pens may get some when I have the time to let the turned blank sit overnight after applying the sealer.