Shellac Jars

patriot

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Joined
Apr 15, 2015
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I have brewed my own shellac for many moons and I have always hated opening the jar because the residue that accumulates around the lid locks it in place making it very hard to open.

This past Christmas a good friend of ours gave us a jar of homemade cranberries.  She packaged it in a very nice Kilner jar of the 'flip-top' type.  When I saw that I immediately thought of Grolsch beer bottles because they use what they call 'swing tops'.  Anyhow, the concept of the tops is the same.

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I purchased my new jars from Bed Bath & Beyond

I hope this helps someone who has the same problem I used to have.

Thanks!
 

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Good idea! Is it true spraying keyboard cleaner (duster) in the jar extends the shelf life of shellac?
 
You can also wrap plumbers' teflon tape around the threads of the jar before putting the lid on, and it won't stick.

Steve
 
huntdupl said:
Good idea! Is it true spraying keyboard cleaner (duster) in the jar extends the shelf life of shellac?

No problem. 

I only wish I had known about these jars ten years ago.  One good thing though, is that my cussin' will be much reduced with these neat jars. My dog will really like that. [thumbs up]
 
huntdupl said:
Good idea! Is it true spraying keyboard cleaner (duster) in the jar extends the shelf life of shellac?

I have never heard of that.  If this works like Bloxygen then that might help, but I think that shellac just has a 'shelf life' and once that time is exceeded then it will not perform as it should.  I think it would be safer just to use fresh shellac on an important surface/project rather than try to save a few bucks only to find that the shellac will not harden after the fact.

I've used a ton of shellac in my day, but I'm far from an expert on the subject.  I normally use super blonde in a 1/2 lb cut for coating the insides of drawers and the like.  Last year I use quite a bit of garnet on a two-door project, but this was sprayed on to insure an even finish.

Shellac is my preferred finish for nearly all of my projects.

Thanks for your post.
 
jtwood said:
You can also wrap plumbers' teflon tape around the threads of the jar before putting the lid on, and it won't stick.

Steve

That's a great idea.  I wish I had thought of that.  It would have saved me a lot of grief.
 
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