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How to secure this.


Toothpick

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Finished this yesterday and applied Danish Oil. Now I’m wondering how to secure it? There is not much surface area for glue. And i don’t want it to squeeze out because it would be hard to clean it up. Any ideas? How do y’all do it? 

I was thinking epoxy on the few areas with the most surface  

Thanks! 

 

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I have used Elmers Glue-All for the last few things I have glued to backers. It is a white PVA glue and dries clear. Spread it on thin and weight the project with a book or two. 

https://www.amazon.com/Elmers-Glue-All-Multi-Purpose-Liquid-E3850/dp/B0045PVK9Q/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=elmers+glue+all&qid=1551292370&s=hardware&sr=1-2

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I've posted this before & some people were delighted to learn it.  My personal favorite is Elmer's School Glue.  Lay down a sheet of wax paper.  Apply rows of glue & trowel it evenly with a credit card.  Drop your piece onto the glue, pick it up, rotate it slightly & drop it the second time.  The glue is now applied evenly and you rarely have a hint of squeeze out.  Elmer's dries clear.

jerry

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4 hours ago, JTTHECLOCKMAN said:

Very nice cutting. Just curious why you did not glue it before you finished it?? If I did the procedure you did then I would resort to epoxy and use the dabbing of the sponge method. I would have glued first and then used Titebond II and again sponge method.

I did the two pieces different colors. Would be tough to do that already glued. Doesn’t look like two different colors cause the woods were so close in color already. 

 

Thanks for the replies everyone! I’ve got some greats ideas now  

 

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Since you will be gluing over a finish, I would add some pin nails from the back as insurance.  By putting them around the edge, you can be sure of hitting wood.  Pin nails can be as short as 3/8", and as long as 2".  They are so small you could probably put some in the front and  no one would ever see them.

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This could be the answer and a Way, WAY, WAY overkill. This is used in the industry for permanent mounting. Few small pieces will hold it forever. Just make sure you place it once, cause it's going to be that way FOREVER! I used this in the industry and at home. RJF

 

https://www.amazon.com/3M-Scotch-5952-VHB-Tape/dp/B01BT0A6MG/ref=sr_1_4?keywords=permanent+tape&qid=1551325133&refinements=p_89%3A3M&rnid=2528832011&s=gateway&sr=8-4

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7 hours ago, woodduck said:

I use a small foam paint roller About  2. i/2" in length &1 1/4"in diameter .I then load it up with PVA glue from a small tray & roll it over the back of the pattern you end up with a very thin layer of glue & no squeeze out.

I am a big fan of the foam roller and titebond glue.

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1 hour ago, Toothpick said:

The glue on the foam roller  - stupid question time, ...is the roller one time use or does the glue wash out?. And I assume you can simply pour the glue from the tray back in the bottle....

There are no stupid questions.  The foam roller last me 100's of projects.  I still have most of the 4' piece of pipe insulation I started out with 10 years ago.  When done just wipe off the glue with a wet paper towel.  Should you get busy and forget to clean it don't worry.  Allow to dry completely (over night) and then peel the glue off.  My glue of choice is Gorilla brand wood glue.  It dries clear.    BTW I got this tip from the late Dirk Boelman at a scroll saw class.

glue spreader.jpg

Edited by NC Scroller
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Thanks, Scott. 

I appreciate everyone’s input here. I didn’t have a lot of the stuff mentioned on hand. But I had the superglue. So that’s what I used. Superglue quite a few spots around the piece and stacked some books on it. It appears to be holding fine. I’m giving it to my buddy tomorrow. 

Now I got a bunch of great tips for future projects! 

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