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I'm want to paint my project with a very light coat of spraypaint, without grain filler so that the wood grain is still visible.

I've seen a linseed oil finish on bare wood, and after 10 or 15 thin coats, allowing each coat to dry, the wood ends up with a glossy finish. Would it still be possible to get that kind of finish after spraypainting?

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No you don't want to do that. Linseed oil is not a suitable final finish over paint as it doesn't form a hard, durable film. It's only good when it soaks directly into the wood so that it isn't sitting on the surface but is within the wood fibres.

Your best choices to protect paintwork are a varnish or lacquer, both of which are intended to make durable surface films.

The easiest option here would probably be a waterbased polyurethane varnish, I think this should bond well enough to a very lightly sprayed wood surface however I'm not certain so it would be advisable to do a test piece or two to check.

If you would prefer to go with a lacquer (many spraycan clear finishes) you'll need to test for compatibility with the paint you're using as many spray finishes can interact with paints that they were not intended to go over. If there is a clear finish in the same range as the paint you're using that shouldn't be a problem.


Slightly off-topic but I wanted to say a bit about this:

I've seen a linseed oil finish on bare wood, and after 10 or 15 thin coats, allowing each coat to dry, the wood ends up with a glossy finish.

It shouldn't require 10-15 coats to get a glossy finish, that's just masochism ^_^ Using linseed oil you should start to get a decent sheen at about the third or fourth coat (if you don't you're not doing it right) and it's about as good as you can reasonably expect after about 6-8 coats. That number of coats already requires a little more than a week, who wants to be finishing something for longer than two weeks?

If a gloss level higher than this is needed then the piece should really be varnished because as few as three coats can give you a really good shine and this may take as little as a day and a half in suitable conditions. With the added advantage that varnish also produces a surface that's about ten times more resistant to scratches and water!

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  • All right. I'll probably go with clear lacquer over the spray painted parts. Thanks for clearing that up about the linseed oil finish. I hadn't done a lot of research on it. I'm looking for a slight sheen, so maybe 5 or 6 coats will do?
    – thinoquinn
    Mar 11, 2017 at 20:05
  • @thinoquinn Although you can apply five/six (or more) coats two or three is often the maximum people will apply, depending on the level of protection they need. I generally assume a gloss finish is used, but if you want a shine level below full gloss then you may want to pick a satin or semi-gloss lacquer. With those often you wouldn't want to apply more than two coats or there's a risk of the piece looking 'clouded'.
    – Graphus
    Mar 12, 2017 at 16:20
  • If you were finishing a gross guitar that you wanted to kind of "have a sheen" like it used to be finished in old school laquer, (and you want it to continue to wear natural) would boiled linseed work? It will harden a bit right? Especially depending on how painted the wood is (some grain fill and what appears to be like spray paint on maple) Jul 26, 2021 at 5:34
  • @GusCrawford, I had to re-familiarise myself with my Answer and it basically answers your questions here. Yeah I suppose you could still do this, but linseed oil doesn't add much shine (varnish is way glossier) and as mentioned it doesn't actually go hard. In case you don't know you can actually still get old-school nitrocellulose lacquer — it's still widely used in guitar finishing, and it's sold in spraycans so a compressor and spraygun aren't a requirement if you wanted to try it.
    – Graphus
    Jul 26, 2021 at 8:02

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