Varnish does not always include shellac. It's usually a combination of a drying oil, a resin, and a thinner. Go to the wikipedia link below to read all about varnish.
The precise formula for nail varnish is always kept a company trade secret. Basic components used are: * film forming agents * resins and plasticizers * solvents * coloring agents * chemical and hebal based ingredients
Yes, Minwax Poly S/G will work great on a headboard. Other options include spray lacquer, shellac or a spar varnish.
I would use an exterior polyurethane. It is going to hold up better and be more flexible than a varnish. Polyurethane has taken over the varnish market--it's hard to find any other kind. There is a "spar polyurethane," which is what you should use on the item in question.
Yes, you can finish the wood with a shellac varnish or any other substitute. Or if you want to paint an opaque color over it (instead of something that will just stain the wood) oil based paints made for the home exteriors will preserve your wood much longer.
Thinners, binders, and carrier liquids are a few of a number of vehicle used with other active ingredients or paint pigments. So, yes, paint thinner is a vehicle as long as it contains active ingredients or pigments.
The precise formula for nail varnish is always kept a company trade secret. Basic components used are: * film forming agents * resins and plasticizers * solvents * coloring agents * chemical and hebal based ingredients
Yes you can:)
Yes, Minwax Poly S/G will work great on a headboard. Other options include spray lacquer, shellac or a spar varnish.
There are two basic meanings for "shellac." One is the varnish used to coat wood, as in a wood floor - perhaps he meant for everyone to crowd onto the dance floor. Another meaning is an old vinyl record, so he might have meant to ask for lots of requests so that he could pile lots of records on top of each other.
It can be bare (without varnish) but they should not touch each other as this will create a short circuit.
Massage solar oil into your nails and cuticles, I recommended this to a friend of mine who has shellac nails, and she was raving the other day about how great her nails are still looking.
A varnish, consisting of a solution of shell-lac in alcohol, often colored with gamboge, saffron, or the like; -- used for varnishing metals, papier-mache, and wood. The name is also given to varnishes made of other ingredients, esp. the tough, solid varnish of the Japanese, with which ornamental objects are made., To cover with lacquer.
It is simply a binder or catalyst for the other ingredients.
heaps of ingredients and other stuff
According to Webster's New Twentieth Century Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged (published in 1956, Standard Reference Works Publishing Company, Inc., New York,) a "jappaner" was one who "japans". "Japan" is: 1. Work varnished and figured in the manner practised by the natives of Japan. 2. A liquid resembling lacquer or varnish made by boiling shellac or a similar resin with linseed oil and other ingredients and thinning the product with turpentine. 3. Any of various black varnishes.
There is: . Nail Varnish . Deodarant . Room Fresheners
The syrup can be considered as a solvent for the other ingredients.