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- From: boylan@sltg04.ljo.dec.com (Steve Boylan)
- Newsgroups: alt.pagan
- Subject: Re: Care & Feeding of Staves
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.213725.7143@nntpd.lkg.dec.com>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 21:37:25 GMT
- References: <1e527jINN917@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu> <lgfr0sINN97u@news.bbn.com>
- Sender: usenet@nntpd.lkg.dec.com (USENET News System)
- Reply-To: boylan@ljohub.enet.dec.com (Steve Boylan)
- Organization: Digital Equipment Corporation
- Lines: 47
-
-
- From a wood finishing perspective . . .
-
- There are lots of things you can do to preserve and protect wood,
- but most of them involve doing things like enveloping the wood in
- a plastic shell - which is, I suspect, NOT what you have in mind
- for something like a staff (or a wand).
-
- I'd guess you want some kind of traditional, as-natural-as-possible
- wood finish. One option is shellac - the processed secretions of
- the lac bug (I'm not kidding! Real shellac comes from insects!).
- However, one of the most common traditional, natural wood finishes
- is an oil finish . . . which is produced by rubbing the wood with
- a natural oil like tung oil or . . . linseed oil!
-
- Now, the old-time wood finishers used what is called "boiled linseed
- oil", where the oil is processed by heat. That's not something you
- want to try making yourself - the oil WILL burn - but you can buy
- boiled linseed oil at hardware stores.
-
- I seem to recall that you can get a harder, more durable finish by
- adding beeswax, but I can't remember whether the beeswax will dissolve
- in the linseed oil or not; you might have to use another solvent for
- that. I'll try to look that up tonight.
-
- I like your choice of not using any steel on the wood; while I might
- choose to use a knife, myself, for cleaning and trimming (some of my
- hand tools ARE ritual objects themselves!), I think that in creating a
- magi[ck]al tool you're doing something very intimate and you SHOULD be
- as involved with the wood as you can get.
-
- Scraping and sanding a 48-inch staff may take you a while without
- power tools, but I think you're going at it in a most appropriate
- way (in other words, I like your attitude!).
-
- I also liked Dawn's idea of using a scented oil, although that might
- depend on how I was going to use the staff. For walking in the woods,
- it would feel out of place to me. The scent might also be inappropriate
- for a particular ritual, if you wanted to use your staff in such a
- setting.
-
- Now you've got me thinking "hmm, weren't there some downed
- limbs in the woods behind my friend's house?"
-
- - - Steve
-
- boylan@ljohub.enet.dec.com
-