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flatting agent

Flatting agent from the bottom of the can.

I have a confession to make. No one knows I did this, at least no one who speaks English, not even my wife. But you are about to know it.

In 1974 my wife (who is Danish) and I moved to Denmark to try to live there. Things were not good in the United States. Nixon had just resigned because of Watergate, and the economy was bad because of the first oil crisis. We had always talked about trying to live in both countries before settling on one. This was a good time in our lives to try Denmark.

For the first year or so, my wife worked. I learned Danish, took care of our two small boys and turned a former small grocery store on the ground floor of one of the typical, block-size, early 20th-century four-or-five story apartment buildings you see all over Northern Europe, into an apartment.

Then it became time for me to get a job. I had a lot of experience with woodworking, so I went to the cabinetmaker’s union to see if anything was available. The economy was bad in Denmark, too, of course (stupid us; we didn’t realize this), so there were no openings. But there were some cabinetmakers who were willing to hire for finishing.

I picked the one closest to our apartment and went for an interview. The foreman asked about my experience spraying. My Danish was OK but not that good, so I hid behind that while I exaggerated and asked that the finisher I was replacing stay over an extra day to show me the system.

I got the job.

Several days later the foreman came into the finish room and asked me about the sheen of the pieces I was spraying with a catalyzed lacquer. The sheen was too glossy. Was I stirring the finish before spraying it? I wasn’t! My predecessor hadn’t mentioned this.

Big lesson. Any finish with flatting agents (to make it satin or flat) has to be stirred, or shaken mechanically, before applying.

I wish I were the only beginning finisher who has made this mistake, but I know I’m not. Be warned. If there’s any solid material on the bottom of the can, stir it in.

— Bob Flexner
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Showing 5 comments
  • John in Calgary

    Conversely, if you don’t mix in the stuff at the bottom properly each time you use the can, remember not to try to stretch the can to finish a project, otherwise you’ll just end up having to remove the final coats that ended up being only flattening agents!

    John

  • DaveS2

    I generally stir all finishes on the assumption something in it has settled or separated. Are there any finishes where this could cause problems?

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