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I bought some outdoor furniture for the patio recently. It came with a light stain all over the wood, but the staining won't last for long against the elements. I was wondering what I would need to know if I wanted to varnish over the staining in order to preserve its life. Do I need to sand the wood first before using a marine varnish, or do I need to paint an undercoat of some sort first, or can I simply go ahead and varnish straight away?
Hi @5Thumbs
Does the wood look dry like normal wood? What I mean is some outdoor furnature are oiled and might need to reduce the oil out of the timber first to apply any varnish type paints.
If a furnature is oiled people can always keep it oil with linseed oil or the like if done right I how ever is near yearly maintenance,
My personal favorite Is
Sikkens Cetol HLSe. (Natural No colours ) this usually has timber stains added be advised)
Finish with
Hi @5Thumbs,
Great advice from @Jewelleryrescue. Typically outdoor furniture will come with a protective coating, and yours has likely been coated with an oil and stain combo. It would be best to leave it as such and do the yearly re-oil. The benefit of oils over hard coatings is that with yearly maintenance, they can be rejuvenated with a quick wipe over of oil. Hard coatings, however, need to be sanded back and re-coated when deteriorated. That's why you'll generally find most outdoor furniture comes with oil rather than a hard coating, as maintenance is much simpler.
If your furniture doesn't have a protective coating, which would be unusual, you can apply a marine varnish directly over the stain.
Please let us know if you have further questions.
Mitchell
Thanks Jewelleryrescue. Good advice.
Hi Mitchell
Thanks for the feedback. It's looking like I should not varnish but rather re-oil each year. Glad I asked you guys, because I would have made a bit of a mess with this one, I think.
No problems @5Thumbs! Please reach out anytime you need assistance with a project around the home or garden; we're here to help.
Mitchell
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