Tiki Central / Tiki Carving
Palm TIki Rescue
Pages: 1 7 replies
D
DoKwan
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Mon, May 25, 2015 3:27 PM
Our last CL finds were a trio of friends that have seen their fair share of New England weather. Legend has it that they started out as Florida Palms and were shipped up our way quite a few years ago. It would be great to keep them with us for as long as possible. What is your recommendations for older Palm carvings? |
ATP
Atomic Tiki Punk
Posted
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Mon, May 25, 2015 3:55 PM
A light sanding & a UV outdoor rated clear coat |
4
4WDtiki
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Mon, May 25, 2015 9:41 PM
You can't buy patina, I'd leave them as is. I suggest you be very careful moving that one on the right in the pic. It looks as the sides of the mouth are all that support everything above it, and that's a lot! That's the point that will break, and it will break if it continues to be the support. Maybe you could mount it so there is support from above, maybe against a wall? |
D
DoKwan
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Tue, May 26, 2015 3:50 AM
Yeah, the patina is part of their charm. Sanding them would remove far to much material. The surface is like a brittle porous sponge at this point. Maybe we will test some areas on the back side with some spar urethane and see what happens. |
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AlohaStation
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Tue, May 26, 2015 6:22 AM
Leave them alone. You bought old tikis - leave them as old tikis. The only reason to try repairing them would be so you can mount them (if the palm can not hold screws). If you feel you must do something - keep them away from moisture (indoors). Even in the state they are now, they will last for several years. |
T
TheBigT
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Thu, Jun 4, 2015 10:09 AM
if they were mine AND i wanted to preserve them for a long time BUT i also want them outside, then i would apply some Minwax Wood Hardener. Let it soak in good. that's probably all i'd do unless they really started to deteriorate. It will leave a slightly glossy finish (because it's plastic), however will preserve the rest of the patina (color and surface wear). there are also things like spray on laquer and acrylic. i like wood hardener for stuff like this bc it soaks in and plasticizes any spongy places in the wood. |
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AlohaTexasTikiCo
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Fri, Jun 5, 2015 11:20 PM
Those are cool. I agree with Bill in that you can't buy patina. Many try to "create" that look but few achieve it. Also Big T (or the mad scientist of finishing) has a great point. |
A
amate
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Sat, Jun 6, 2015 4:38 AM
HA! He does have a few tricks up his sleeve. |
Pages: 1 7 replies