Sentences with phrase «shellac so»

I am dying to do the dark polish, but think I need to do a professional shellac so that it does nt chip 2 minutes after applying!

Not exact matches

Then again, they got shellacked pretty hard by Minnesota last night, so maybe they fold completely after the Stastny trade.
So I tried the Shellac a couple of times and liked it, but then I moved here to Michigan and getting my nails done is way more expensive.
He applied to MIT to study electrical engineering so that he could solve a problem in hi - fi — how to suppress the hiss made by the shellac records of the day.
So to achieve this Restoration Hardware Inspired look, I started off with a coat of Pure White Chalk Paint ® (after washing down the piece and applying a few coats of clear shellac).
I picked up Fiji a few weeks ago but since then I'm been rocking a shellac manicure so I haven't tested it out.
So, I emailed her this post regarding shellac.
I thought I would need to apply Zinsser Shellac over it as so the paint would cover it, but thought I would experiment first and just try the Duck Egg Blue Chalk Paint ® directly over the burn mark to see how it covered.
The money is all Morris cares about anyway, so he's content to let them lose, but once he sees them take their first shellacking, he has a change of heart.
This is network TV, so the consequences of the women's actions are less severe than what one might see over on cable; there is a bit of cartoon sparkle in their mischief, and a shellac of bouncy jokes and visual gags that overrides their nagging qualms about spiraling out of control.
And maybe Acura should be shellacked a little bit for keeping the RLX in the»80s for so long.
The surfaces are so shellacked, there's a distance between the viewer and the piece.»
The reason for using BIN over Kiltz is because the BIN primer is shellac based so it will dry quickly and has better stain blocking properties.
He is just so adorable — onto the wood, with with the larger darker knots — before priming use a small paint brush and coat with shellac, let dry and lightly sand.
Some of the lines on the walls were bleeding through, so we had to buy a shellac primer, extremely smelly, and I am assuming toxic.
it did bleed in spots, so I spot shellacked those to seal, then added second grey coat with no bonding agent.
The wood was mahogany, so a coat of clear Shellac went over the whole set to prevent that red stain from bleeding through.
Then in both examples, blow off the surface of any dust and use Zinsser Clear Shellac to as so to seal the surface (I like the aerosol cans - but you have to use the spray outside) and apply a thorough coat of shellac over the wholeShellac to as so to seal the surface (I like the aerosol cans - but you have to use the spray outside) and apply a thorough coat of shellac over the wholeshellac over the whole piece.
If you have read my post about when to use Shellac - you know that it is a life saver and has so many uses like when you are having painting issues with: (Click HERE to read that post)
I thought I would need to apply Zinsser Shellac over it as so the paint would cover it, but thought I would experiment first and just try the Duck Egg Blue Chalk Paint ® directly over the burn mark to see how it covered.
Again, note that shellac is a sealer so it will seal the surface preventing stain or wood tannins from bleeding through your new paint.
Aerosol cans of shellac will cost more than buying the quart, so for large jobs - I recommend the quart.
Love the price, ease of mixing, and application is great - I am having Bleed Thru of the Tanins of my piece - So, hoping to not have to use Shellac (b / c of the fumes).
I also have only added shellac to one piece ever, so you may want to try painting a piece and skipping this step.
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