What Is Your Personal OB Shine Juice, Friction Polish “Secret Recipe”

What Is Your Personal
Shine Juice “Secret Recipe”

TheGlen OfDoom over at our woodturning facebook group  asked the question What is your personal Shine juice “Secret Recipe”

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I can say from experience that the amount of shine that comes from OB Shine Juice comes from a couple of different factors.

#1 type of wood
#2 how well you have sanded the project, don’t expect a piece to look like glass if you only sanded to 220grit
#3 How well you apply the finish. You need to develop a technique that works for you. Too much pressure and burn will make it dull, not enough will also make it dull. You need to develop just enough heat to make all the components work together.
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Make your own ob shine juice friction polish
Make your own ob shine juice friction polish

I’m always fascinated with the different ways woodturners finish their wood-turning projects. In fact, I go through states, I try one formula for a couple months, then the next, then I’ll modify a formula and then I must might use pure mineral oil.

Your finish all depends on what you are going to use the project for and if it involves food. Theoretically if food is involved you need a food safe sealing and finish project. However, most will tell you that once any finish “cures” it is ‘food safe’. Not hard but cured, that could take 30 days or more.

Captain Eddie and OB Shine Juice

capn eddie shares ob shine juice formula
Capn’ Eddie on making ob shine juice and how to apply it

Joe Duncan
Eddie Castelin has a video on his youtube channel. Eddie’s finish is actually a friction polish of which there have been many variations of over the years. Capn’ Eddie makes it nice and simple.

I started playing around with Capn’ Eddie’s basic formula after I first got started. OB Shine Juice is my go to finish for wood handles and other utilitarian projects. I never seem to get a great shine, but I’m getting better and by altering some of the basics you might discover something best. But watch Capn’t Eddie, please support his channel and website!

This next video is from RickTurns (utube channel) he goes into great specifics for all you geeks that want to know exactly what is in it and how it works.

David Fafford
David Fafford 1/3 boiled linseed oil 1/3 shellac 1/3 denatured alcohol works for me

Allen Grim
Allen Grim OB shine juice isn’t exactly “secret”. See both previous comments.

Trisha Johnston
Trisha Johnston Man….I saw shine and thought it was something else🤦🤦🤣🤣🤣…got a little excited lol

Stephen Vete
Stephen Vete Nothing wrong with that!

William McNabb
William McNabb I know this is unrelated. But when I read ‘SHINE’ I think of this :-)https://youtu.be/j9FcMIYatmI
Manage
LOLO – Shine [OFFICIAL VIDEO]
YOUTUBE.COM
LOLO – Shine [OFFICIAL VIDEO]
LOLO – Shine [OFFICIAL VIDEO]

Nad Arn Have you dry to use mineral oil instead of linseed ?

Matthew Wilson
Matthew Wilson Nad Arn the problem is that mineral oil doesnt dry or cure at all but blo does which is one reason why it could be superior

Roger J Behnke
Roger J Behnke I haven’t tried it yet, but some people prefer tung oil instead of BLO in their Shine Juice. I’m going to give it a try when my current supply of Shine Juice is gone.

bowl finished in ob shine juice
Cedar Bowl Finished using Capn’ Eddies Ob Shine Juice

Andrew Vonderschmitt
Andrew Vonderschmitt Following

Paul L. Grimala
Paul L. Grimala If I give it to you it wont be a secret

Bob Ierien
Bob Ierien Depends on what I’m trying to make shiny. For a small piece that’s going to be handled a lot (like a pen), thin CA, usually with a coat or two of plastic polish on top. For a bigger piece that’s not going to be handled a lot, Myland’s High Build Fricti…See More

Ben Hall
Ben Hall Bob Ierien I make and use a
” wood butter ” 3 parts beeswax to 2 part mineral oil. I love this for my tools ( plane irons ect ) , old wooden hand planes and of course cutting boards. Other then that I like myland friction polish and or BLO and CA.

Bob Ierien
Bob Ierien Ben Hall I found a mineral oil/beeswax blend called Howard’s that I really like.

Bob Ierien
Bob Ierien I use it on spoons, cutting boards, bowls, pretty much anything that needs to be food safe.

Ben Hall
Ben Hall Bob Ierien I do the same. When I restore old plane irons or other tools I’ll rub this on thick and let sit overnight, then wipe clean. I have never had them rust after. This by far is one of my favorite rub on finish for utilitarian projects. I’ll have to check out the Howard’s finish.

Scott Parat
Write a reply…

Donn Lee
Donn Lee 60,30,10. I went to this formula and got better shine.

Al Furtado Uses His Own
Blend of Ob Shine Juice

Al Furtado is a user of ob shine juice
Al Furtado uses his own special blend of ob shine juice

Adam Hodges
Adam Hodges Following

Mark Phillips
Mark Phillips I like to do a full coat of just blo before shine juice applications. Brings out more deep color

Original OB Shinejuice Thread

You can check out the thread over at https://www.facebook.com/groups/woodturningbasics/permalink/752679928478512/

Can Woodturners Turn Cottonwood?

Small Cotton Wood Bowl or Cup

cottonwood leafI see lots of questions on whether cottonwood or poplar can be turned. The standard answer for any wood is yes, it can be turned, how well it turns is a different story!

Cottonwood is not a very dense wood and has soft stringy fibers. When it is fresh cut or green, it holds a lot of water. So drying your logs and woodblanks might take some special care to avoid it drying too quickly causing cracks and checks.

As green cottonwood spins on the lathe it will spit water at you. It was a wet spring and summer this year so the wood held a lot of water, it did not matteral if you turned a spindle blank or a bowl blank, you were going to get wet.

Drying Cotton Wood for Processing

I cut my logs into 24″ logs. I read that these spring/summer logs hold a tremendous amount of water. Now, traditional drying preparation would involved painting/sealing of the log ends. Then laying them horizontally on the ground and stack them. Try to keep them in the sun but put something over the top of the log stack ….like a tarp, piece of metal roof or piece of plywood. They can now sit outside until you are ready to further process the cottonwood logs into woodturning blanks.

Dry the Log by Vertical Draining

cotton wood bowl blanks
Ebay is a Good Source of CottonWood Woodturning Blanks!

I learned a secret trick. Before you seal the ends and stack the wood, stand the logs on end for a day or so….as long as you can before you start to see any splitting or checking, gravity forces the water and nutrients to literally drain down the log into the ground. It will lose water weight quickly.

Once that water is drained it will want to start the cracking and checking process so you need to get out there and quickly seal the ends of those logs with Anchor Seal, Wax or some old paint (put it on thick) …Now they are ready to store outside or inside for further processing and drying.

Cottonwood requires sharp tools you might even consider trying carbide insert tools to hollowing and shaping. But check out this ebay listing. Lots of cottonwood blanks to chose from. Once dry, cottonwood is fairly light. It is not as dense as oak but it is stringy. Still, it makes for beautiful woodturning projects once you get to understand how to work the wood.

Did Some Drying Tests on
Smaller Pieces of Cottonwood

I grabbed some branches that were about 6 inches plus in diamter and cut them into 6 to 8″ pieces. I made myself about 12 pieces like that, I knew I was going to use 2 right away, the rest I slapped on some old paint sealer and set them aside.

End Grain Turning On Cottonwood Logs/Branches

I thought I would try some end grain turning. So I stripped the bark from the pieces and proceeded to turn the stock cottonwood to a round cylinder. Since these were rather short pieces I used a tenon instead of a recess. The tenon can be grabbed by the scroll chuck and not split the project apart, as might happen if you tried to use a recess or mortise.

First Attempt At MicroWave Drying


I was talking to some FB friends over on facebook.com/groups/woodturningbasics and they suggested drying the blank with a microwave. I had not tried that technique yet but I figured this would be a good first time.

I shaped the outsite of the vessel and gouged out the interior of the project. They say that the wall thickness should be 10% of the total diameter. So the project at this time is finished shaped on the outside and rough shaped on the inside.

Finishes…..What Should I use?

I wanted to finish the experior with a lacquer matte finish and the inside I was going to use a food safe epoxy finish that would allow the project to be used as a cup, soup bowl or maybe mortar and pestle.

I finished the ouside and sanded down to 1200 grit. Then I added some lines to the outside by using a thin wire while the project was rotating…..they look like dark lines.

Food Safe Cottonwood bowl, lacquer outside food safe epoxy inside.
cottonwood bowl, dried in mircrowave, lacquer on the outside and food safe expoxy on inside

Time For The Microwave Drying Test

I had some oak projects, hickory, and ash projects along with the cottonwood. The cottonwood took the longest to dry.

I put each project in the mircowave seperately on high heat for 60 to 90 seconds. I would let it cool between heatings and since it was late I might be able to give it 3 or 4 treatments. I’ll keep my comments to the Cottonwood. It took about 3 days of treatments to get it to the point where it would stop losing water. I weighed the pieces each day, when a piece stopped losing water it was done.

This is the scale I used Weighmax Stainless Steel 90lb scale.

Next I applied Deft Lacquer Sanding Sealer to the outside of the piece  and sanded down to 1200 grit. One more coat of deft sanding sealer. I like this sanding sealer because it literally dries in 5 or 10 minutes and if you apply it while the lathe is turning it will be dry in 60 seconds…..ready for another coat.


I applied a couple coats of Satin Lacquer finish on the exterior part of the cup/bowl. Lightely sanding in between. You should really let it set up for 6 to 8 hours before sanding again. After the fininal coat of lacquer let it dry 24 hours and buff it out with a soft cloth, either on the lathe or a dedicated buffing station. Be careful because, although it is hard to the touch it is still soft and a hard buffing will cause the finish to melt and get disfigured.

Finish Interior of Cottonwood Bowl/Cup

End grain turning on cottonwood bowl/cup
This is an endgrain turning on a piece of cottonwood to form a cup/bowl.

At this point the project should be at its final interior shape, sanded and ready for finish.

I chose to use a food safe Epoxy Finsh by Max Clear . It is clear, it is very hard and it is food safe. So I could turn this project into a mortar and pestle, or it could hold hot soup or hot coffee.

Final Thoughts On Using
Cottonwood for Wood Turning

Since both Poplar and Cottonwood are kissing cousins, both perform in a similar way for woodturning projects. It is a little stringy, you will need sharp tools and you will need to make your final cuts with traditional tools and know how to make them cut and not scrape. You can use scrapers to get the piece of wood in shape and then use your tradional turning tools to cut the fibers of this wood. Each woodturner develops his/her own technique for getting a project down, what tools work best with what wood. ….which machine is the best and even what finish is the best. Things we  can only learn through time by experience or advice from fellow woodturners

However, if you can’t get clean cuts and you end up with some torn endgrain then it is time to start doing some sanding. Start off with 80 grit if you have to and get down to 500 or so. It was my experience that when sanding the wood when wet would really load up the sanding paper in seconds, so you must get the final sanding done when the wood is dry.

Apply Sanding Sealer on
Tough Stringy Wood

I usually use Deft Lacquer Sanding Sealer. And I dilute it with 25% to 50% Lacquer Thinner. It can be applied while the project is rotating on the lathe with a paper towl. You can do a quick sand after the first coat and give it one more, then let it dry …5 minutes do a light sanding and apply your finish of choice. Applying sanding sealer to the wood when it is dry will help you to sand it down to as smooth a finish as possible. At this point you can apply the final coats of lacquer finish.

Cottonwood live edge bowl
Live edge bowl made from cottonwood log, beautiful colors and bark hung on tight

The inside of the project is a little trickier. It is a small project so you will not have a lot of room to work. I use a scotch pad wrapped in sandpaper and carefuflly sand the inside until it is ready to be finished.

I am now ready to apply the Food Safe Epoxy Finish . This is an art in and of itself. Apply a thin layer first and after it dries apply a thicker layer. I used a cheap rotisere motor to rotate the scroll chuck as the second coat is applied. Use a light spray of acetone to take out bubbles and a heat dryer will help to elimate the rest of the bubbless.

This last second is more art than skill. You’ll have to experiment in how to coat the inside or outside of a project with an epoxy finish. Ther are a lot of youtube videos on how different woodturnings set up their turning stations.

Should I Make This a Mortar and Pestle

By now you are tired of reading about my cottonwood bowl 🙂

But I had a thought, this would make a perfect “Mortar & Pestle” the epoxy finish is hard, super hard and I could easily make a “pestle” for grinding herbs and the like into the cup. Keep in mind, you should apply the expoxy in layers….not too thick, let it dry 24 hours and apply another coat. You should need very little sanding. If you were to use it as a motar and pestle, let it sit for 3 to 5 days before attempting any heavy use.

I’m still torn between the cottonwood soup bowl and/or cup.

I guess the lesson here is that you never know what you are going to turn. What starts out as a bowl ends up being a kitchen utensil 🙂 On top of that, you never know what the wood is going to give you. Who would have thought that cottonwood would make a good turning blank. It ends up being an excellent piece of wood to turn, whether straight end grain or a log sliced into a bowl blank.

Since I will have about 50 blanks of cottonwood to turn I am going to experiment with dyes and resins……I might save that until this winter.

Rough turrned LIve edge cottonwood bowl
Rough Turned a live edge cottownwood bowl from a log, bark stayed on well, its now drying waiting for foodsafe finish

However I wanted to show you a bowl I’m in the middle of, its from the same tree, the bark has stuck solidly, I turned the rough shape and then started to sand, it clogged up any sandpaper I had so I let it sit for a couple of days to dry. The I finished the outside with deft sanding sealer, sanded the outside pretty good and sprayed on some satin lacquer. The beauty behind satin lacquer is that after a couple of coats, let it dry for at least 24 hours and you can buff out a beautiful deep low sheen finish.

Since it was so wet when I turned this bowl, I decided to let the inside stay unfinished for a couple weeks in the open air. I checked it on my scale for water loss and on with my moisure meter. I did lose 3 oz already and is now slowing down.

I love the way the bark shows on this piece. I’ll do a more thorough video on how I did this piece once I get my cameras set up again. …..getting close 🙂

Can I Use Cottonwood For Woodturning

small bowl made from cottonwoodShort answer…..you betcha. Turning it green makes for easy shaping. The bark sticks very good if you want to go for live edge. Once the outside and inside is dry, sanding is easy and finishing is a breeze.

I’m always looking for something different to do with my bowls and other turnings. Cottonwood could lead itself to some very nice designs by burning it with a torch as it spins on the lathe. Or, you might want to experiment with some stain, lightly stain the wood to bring out the wood grain. YOu would be best to see how this works by staining a flat piece of cottonwood or poplar and start off with a small amount of stain and work your way up so you might see what it would look like.

I wish I had a bigger lathe.

I have some huge hunks of poplar and ash and oak that I would like to turn some 24 inch bowls or sinks. Until then I will work with what I have and hopefully find out ways to turn cottonwood into some trophies 🙂

Thanks for reading 🙂

Make Your Own Polishing Wax For Wood Bowls and Other Turning Projects Like Yorkshire Grit

DIY Polishing Paste Like Yourshire Grit for Woodturning Projects

Earlier in my life I purchased everything I needed. I had the money to buy stuff and that’s what I did. Nowadays I have a need to make my own and I enjoy it immensely!

Woodturning provides plenty of opportunites to make your own woodturning stuff, tools, finishes, jigs and so on.

Wanted to Make My Own
Yorkshire Grit Polishing Paste

I’ve been wanting to make my own finishing wax/paste for wooden bowls. I’ve read and watched a handful of videos on how to make the sanding paste. It really didn’t seem to hard and others seem to get some awesome results with using these types of sanding and finishing pastes. Basically it is:

1. Beeswax
2. Mineral oil
3. Diatomaceous earth

Different Methods and Techniques to
Make the Polishing Wax

It seems that each formula has something a little different and in different amounts. Even the way they put the materials together are different. One guy boils, the next uses a microwave and the one I want to show you today uses a blender to heat and mix all materials together for a perfect finishing paste.

mixing and pouring the finishing paste that is just like yorkshire gritThe approach that is followed in this video is using the vitamix blender or any blender to generate the heat to melt the wax instead of doing a double boiler. Really makes it fast and simple

I stumbled on a youtube video by Kim Tippin where she explains her method of making her own sanding paste in some detail. After watching her video you will have enough info to make your own sanding/finishing paste that will take your woodturning projects to the next level.

applying the diy yorkshire grit sanding pasteThe nice part about using a sanding paste is that you can get a super fine finish that would be ready for a final finish of your choice ….or leave it as it is and just wipe some mineral oil on it when it starts to get dry.

This Sanding/Finishing approach is totally food safe.

At the end of the video I show you some of the better commercial sanding pastes, you might want to buy one just to see how similar yours is to something you buy off the market. In any case, enjoy the free information and make yourself some sanding/polishing paste.

I’ll give you a list of where you can purchase the materials needed to make the paste. Keep in mind, you can add essential oils to the mixture to make it your own special blend.

Kim Tippin Calls it DIY Fast Abrasive Paste

Her Recipe

32 OZ – Mineral Oil

8 OZ – Beeswax

8 OZ – Diatomaceous Earthfew drops of essential oil (optional)

Get all materials needed at the below links

BEEESWAX
https://www.amazon.com/Stakich-Pure-Y…

Diatomaceous Earth Food Grade
https://amzn.to/2YJNjzY

Mineral Oil
https://amzn.to/2GORaBu

And She Thanks:

Thank you, Daniel Vilarino, for sharing your recipe. I too have come across his method of making this sanding paste and can stand for his quality.
His link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zufgDTh3fis

Of course you could go out and get some Yorkshire grit 🙂

You might want to follow Daniel Vilarino ….he has some pretty good techniques and procedures to share when turning wood. Tell him I sent you 🙂