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wrighthouse_gw

cedar window sill

wrighthouse
14 years ago

I need advice on how to refinish/protect a cedar window sill. The wood is about three inches above my kitchen countertop in an area that includes the sink so the wood sometimes gets splashed with water and splattered during food prep.

At first I thought it was stained pine or redwood, but after sanding off the damage, it looks like cedar with a really fine grain. I'm thinking that what I thought was a dark stain may have just been natural darkening. They seem to have had some kind of protective coating on it, most of which had worn off.

What kind of finish will stick to cedar and stand up to periodic cleaning? I would also like to darken the wood to coordinate better with the redwood window trip that has a dark, reddish colored finish.

Comment (1)

  • karinl
    13 years ago

    I think the ability of wood to withstand water is often underrated.

    When we were young and stupid, we finished two fir wood sills beside our bathtub with diluted paint. I wanted them blue with the grain showing, and in those days you either couldn't get blue stain or I couldn't find it, and there were certainly no forums to ask. Similarly, our kitchen cabinets are green diluted paint over pine. I'm sure the green paint was oil-based and thinned with thinner, but I believe in the bathroom we used latex paint thinned with water.

    Sixteen years later, I am pretty astonished at how good this wood looks. The kitchen has some grease spots, but in the bathroom, where the wood gets only soap and water contact (but gets wet every day), the sills look like new when I wipe them.

    I think both our finishes are about equivalent to a penetrating stain; the paint has no integrity as a coating. The fact that your coating wore off also suggests that a penetrating stain might be your best approach. Or who knows, maybe the diluted paint was a good idea for some reason, but you can probably get the colour you want in a stain.

    I don't know a durn thing about staining cedar, but surely there would be some information on the 'net if it has some special needs in regards to a finish sticking; I'm guessing an oil-based stain might be preferable but don't really know.

    KarinL