BEESWAX FINISH. I often use straight beeswax on wood, mostly Eastern Red Cedar since I like the look. Either rub it in using no solvent or apply rub then use a heat gun to melt so the wax seeps into the fiber. Gives an entirely different look.
Beeswax applied with cloth with lathe spinning, generating some heat.
Early bowl from about 20 years ago.
Lid for salt bowl we keep near the stove. Beeswax melted with heat gun.
Glass and silicone seal from Ikea.
Beeswax doesn't hold up well to water but is great for things that don't get wet. I usually apply Reniassance wax on top.
All my beeswax is yellow, natural from my hives - the clean capping comb melted and filtered.
I use thick paper filters I bought for filtering goat's milk.
White beeswax is likely chemically bleached to remove the yellow color.
One of my bees foraging for nectar, pollen, and resins. The newly hatched house bees, not yet foragers, make the wax from special glands.
(BTW, it's tricky to take a macro photo like this - I got 6 good photos from several hundred shots.)
JKJ