Brush up on the basics of 8 popular options before choosing yours.
Pine wood floor finishes.
Pine is not only a very soft wood even syp but fairly porous and needs multiple coats of some sort of film finish.
And it definitely took that long for us.
Apply a colorless oil to preserve the pine s natural color.
With yellow pine floors the color of the floors doesn t change very much.
Most are oil based with the most common types being tung oil and linseed oil.
So what would be a good base for pine.
The most natural but least water resistant film finish is.
It also keeps pitch sealed in the wood.
The best finishes for outdoor pine furniture include latex or oil based paint gel stain or polyurethane followed by a varnish topcoat.
They provide some of the most visually attractive wood finish types.
Without shellac pine s pitch can bleed into oil based finishes leaving fissures or shiny spots that remain tacky especially around knots.
The one downer about oil finishes is the cure time around 30 days to be fully cured.
Best hardwood floor finish for high traffic.
The cheapest of the modern finishes this type adds a warm glow to popular wood flooring options like white oak or maple.
Oil based polyurethane oil based polyurethane offers middle of the road durability at an affordable price.
Penetrating finishes infiltrate wood pores and fibers for a beautiful decorative finish.
Shellac prepares the dyed surface for glazing step 4.
Oils are a traditional softwood finish that will penetrate deep into the pine flooring.
Although in my opinion 4 coats of satin polyurethane makes the very best finish for a pine floor there are many alternatives.
Pine can look beautifully pale when sanded and then once you apply a finishing product particularly a clear one it will highlight the natural tones in the wood with pine this can be red yellow or pink or somewhere in between and this is probably what is showing through on your floor.
Oil finishes unlike many varnishes won t peel or flake and often look better with age.
Penetrating finishes in contrast penetrating finishes sink into the wood so when you touch the floor surface you are actually touching wood.
Penetrating finishes provide a low sheen and take longer to dry than surface finishes.
Applying a finish to deck or patio pine furniture is essential to protect the wood for outdoor elements such as wind rain and sun damage and give it a clean bright look.
Once the oil cured the floor felt a little warmer but the color stayed close to the natural color of the original unfinished pine.
How to finish pine outdoor furniture.
Seal the surface with two coats of 2 lb cut dewaxed shellac.
Sand after each coat with 400 grit paper.