Suggestions please on the selection of wood fillers to be used on elm and/or oak. Would like to have the filler contrast with a final finish of Watco Danish Oil Natural. 

Does that high polish tarnish after a month or two?? If not, how do keep it shiny?mainebowlman said:The pure brass will polish to a "gold" inlay. Higher the grit, better the shine. Looks "rich" in a dark walnut.
baitbegger i have bought oil in a syringe type dispenser (for fishing reels) has anyone seen CA in a syringe type dispenser that does not clog and the amount used can be better controled or has multiple tips that can be cleaned [/QUOTE said:I save tips from bottles of CA with various-sized openings, cleaning them with an acetone soak. If I require a different opening, I remove the existing and put on one appropriate to the flow rate I desire. The bottle is squeezeable enough to use it as a syringe. Clever packaging means not all tips will fit all bottles, so save your old ones for possible re-use as the CA is used up. They also sell add-on tips which fit some bottles, and they can be soaked and re-used as well.
An irrigation syringe might work for injecting thicker CA if the rubber piston seal doesn't react with the CA solvent. I use them for glue and oiling bushings. Imagine you can get them without prescription at a pharmacy, though I get mine at the hospital.
Fillers, and here I'm going to assume, as Mark has from the woods in question, that he means pore fillers, can be purchased and tinted as desired by using artist oil color for oil-based, and water-soluble colors for things like Durham's water putty or plaster of Paris. They should be wiped on along the grain to work them in, be left to set a bit, then carefully wiped across the grain so as not to pull them back out. Standard woodworking procedure, easily searched. Sand and finish with appropriate finishes.
If he means crack fillers, it's tough to beat bark for a natural look yet one which contrasts with the wood. I cut slivers and wedge them into cracks after first putting thicker CA in place. Keeps the bark from absorbing a lot of CA and giving that dead fish eye look you can get with sawdust fills. You can pick from whatever bark varieties are on hand, but cherry, with its easily removed thin sections provides a good dark fill, the bast portion of basswood underbark can be tamped in like oakum, and is lighter in color.
mainebowlman said:To answer your basic question: I tend to use primarily two wood fillers: fresh coffee and/or brass filings with thin CA.
For anyone interested, here's my process: I use a yard sale coffee grinder to really pulverize the coffee as well as the brass key filings (from the box store). The finer the powder the better the sanded finish. I vary the mix from just one of the fillers to a combination of varying proportions. I've come to like a touch of brass in the plain coffee. It offers some subtle highlights. The pure brass will polish to a "gold" inlay. Higher the grit, better the shine. Looks "rich" in a dark walnut.
Jack Savona
Gretch said:I have used my coffee grinder for both instant coffee (only kind I use at home) and bark per suggestions from a previous thread, (thank you forum!!). I couldn't get it real fine. Then tried my blender. Still couldn't- Any secrets? Gretch
Mark Mandell said:mortar and pestile?
donkey and millstone?
14 Spanish maids wearing stone slippers?