Hi! Thank you for sharing the video! My carpenter used the rubio monocoat (natural) on my white oak cabinets. The cabinets were done about three months ago. As we use it, some dark marks started appearing here and there. I can't reach my carpenter, so I had a painter come take a look and he said my cabinets are unfinished and suggested me applying polyurethane on top. Does white oak still look pretty raw/unfinished after you apply Rubio Monocoat? Is Rubio Monocoat supposed to be the only thing that you would need to finish a cabinet?
Is the look you have after rubbing it all in the final look or does it lighten a bit after it settles for X hours/days? Of course I am asking about shades other than Pure, which is pigmentless
The starting material was quite 'red' (in colour) for white oak (which happens, doesn't mean it's red oak!), especially the right piece - I'm curious how the finish would work and look if you first 'bleached' the wood and then applied the Rubio
Totally agree it is a very expensive product especially if you have to apply two coats. I have not tried Natura, but would love too!
Hi! Thank you for sharing the video!
My carpenter used the rubio monocoat (natural) on my white oak cabinets. The cabinets were done about three months ago. As we use it, some dark marks started appearing here and there. I can't reach my carpenter, so I had a painter come take a look and he said my cabinets are unfinished and suggested me applying polyurethane on top.
Does white oak still look pretty raw/unfinished after you apply Rubio Monocoat? Is Rubio Monocoat supposed to be the only thing that you would need to finish a cabinet?
Is the look you have after rubbing it all in the final look or does it lighten a bit after it settles for X hours/days? Of course I am asking about shades other than Pure, which is pigmentless
I would say that it stays pretty close to the same.
@@halfmoonwoodworks thank you, it means a lot!
Very welcome! Happy Thanksgiving!
The starting material was quite 'red' (in colour) for white oak (which happens, doesn't mean it's red oak!), especially the right piece - I'm curious how the finish would work and look if you first 'bleached' the wood and then applied the Rubio