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Which oil should I use on antique pine furniture?

I have new, antique-style pine bedroom furniture similar to the picture shown here ....

http://www.argos.co.uk/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductLargeImagePopup?storeId=10001&jsparm=false&imageName=148-6431848A70UC491640X.jpg

Which oil should I use on this to keep the wood looking dark and old?
Kay, October 2009
Your piece will either have:

No finish
Already oiled
Waxed
Varnished

The first two will take oil - the dark colo(u)r is often called patina by those in the trade - it means the dirt of ages. i.e. dirt sticks to the finish and gets rubbed into the grain. Fresh wood darkens with the application of oil - I prefer teak oil.

You can apply wood stain to bare wood but it tends to be permanent (it soaks in) and still needs dressing with wax, oil or varnish.

On a wax finish it's hard work to remove the wax to apply something else - wax is best on a wax finish and you can get darkened waxes.

On a varnished piece you're pretty much stuck with it - big effort to remove all the sprayed on varnish.

If you decide to varnish your piece apply three coats of gloss and finish with a top coat of matt rubbing down gently and dusting off between coats.

So use teak oil but only if there's no wax or varnish on the wood - several applications - perhaps 3 over the course of a couple of days - the mild and not unpleasant smell will soon fade. You can re-oil as often as you wish - the more oil you use (within reason) the more dirt will stick and the darker the piece will become.

Peccavi, October 2009
link Click here to see other fixes for Argos 148-6431848A70UC491640X.