Custom kiln dried to 6 8 moisture content.
Finishes for blue stained pine floors.
Blue stain pine that has been kiln dried below 19 and has had the pitch set at 160 degrees is about as sterile as it gets.
You ll need to finish your own pine flooring using stain varnish or oil.
Unlike hardwood flooring though softwood does not come pre finished.
Then apply a final coat of stain varnish or oil.
If the boards will not take abuse consider finishing the bare wood with old fashioned paste wax for wood.
Like all other finishes it slightly enhances the natural pigment in pine.
Every tree is hand picked in the forest and range from 100 400 years old.
For the best results test the possible finishes on scrap pieces before you start.
Antique pine often has a dark mellow color.
For maximum protection and durability give the floor 2 coats of stain or varnish and wait 24 hours for the floor to dry.
Although in my opinion 4 coats of satin polyurethane makes the very best finish for a pine floor there are many alternatives.
Some types of wood like pine cherry birch and maple are notoriously difficult to stain.
Our blue stain pine flooring is produced from 100 salvaged ponderosa pine trees killed by the mountain pine beetle.
Woods like cherry pine and birch can become blotchy and unattractive when stained unless you use a sealer before staining.
Now let air blow on it and water re wet it then you have a new event not a recurrence of an old one.
The most natural but least water resistant film finish is shellac.
The wide array of colors are all natural as a result of a fungus from the pine beetle.
There is no hard finish and water and stain resistance is low.
For you purposes at least 5 6 coats of shellac can be brushed or rolled on to a well sanded pine floor.
For the best results clean the floor first with a duster or vacuum to remove any lingering dirt or debris.
Wood flooring professionals tend to assume that everyone knows that stain is quite different from finish varnish is one class of finish used on floors but not the only one which is the generic term for any substance that can seal the porous surface of wood and provide a layer of protection and reflective sheen.
However the result is a soft sheen with most of the original color remaining.