Could you all share with me your glue advice ?
Whats the strongest glue you've worked with, etc etc... this is wood glue of course

thanks
R
I went on a gilding course several years ago and to overcome the problem of the mitres cracking and the cracks continuing through the gesso we glued some very fine silk over the corners before applying the gesso. This appeared to work perfectly ok.we do a lot of work with gesso and man, no matter how hard i try, some of the corners are always cracking, this is with biscuits and titebond glue....
If you want a really good bond on oak, you can't beat the old 'poxy resin. But use the original slow setting stuff in the blue tubes. It's messy and it's expensive and you really need to clamp it very tightly for at least 24 hrs, but once cured it is extremely tough. Don't rely on nails to hold the joint tight while it cures. A strap clamp is ideal.raph.basan wrote:well,. so far not so good.I tried the polyurethane glue from titebond, I used the titebond one as we use their PVA one which seems to be better than most PVA's, well, i am far from impressed with their polyurethane version..... i put together a small oak frame late yesterday, glued the mitres, cut some biscuits into them, glued the biscuits into it...etc etc, you get the drift.... well, almost 24 hours later, i gently pulled the biscuits out.... and i gently pulled the mitres apart.... not cool.
i'll try it on some other woods tomorrow....
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I have read the destructions on the lable, and all seems to be fine, the oak was a bit dry, but believe me when i say that there is enough moisture in the air... the glue was activated as it foamed and formed a hard crust around the biscuit.... oh well. i'll try harder !!!
try and try again !!!
R
If Terry Wogan had read this, Dermot, he'd have given you a slap!Dermot wrote:A bit of a sticky subject this one……….
Sorry I couldn’t …..resist …..![]()
My local pound shop in whitland has got loads of the exterior version. I got a whole box (12 tubes) for a tenner! To keep it fresh use a biro top (put some H.A.N. in the airhole and let it dry). This will keep it fresh for months, and comes off easily even when it is clogged with glue.prospero wrote:I went into the local Poundland this morning to get some cheapo brushes and lo and behold on a shelf all on it's own was a tube of Hard As Nails. Not No More Nails. So I got it.I'll keep an eye out next time to see if they restock.
Quid for a big tube. Can't go wrong.