A heat gun will take out the bubbles, level it out, and make it clear as glass on the first application. I’ve used this product a lot, just a tip for you.
At the 2:47 mark, you'll notice Step 4 - it appears you skipped this step, and that's why you had bubbles with each application. With a heat gun, or a torch, the bubbles pop immediately. Also, with most epoxy / resins, you're supposed to sand between pours, so that the layers bond well.
Really good 3 part video, Frank. How much did all materials cost for this project? Also, apart from the butcher block, was all materials sourced from Home Depot/Lowes?
Thanks for the video. It looks beautiful. We're in the process of this right now so you're video is is very handy and so are the comments.
A heat gun will take out the bubbles, level it out, and make it clear as glass on the first application. I’ve used this product a lot, just a tip for you.
Yeah tbh this didn't look all that professional
At the 2:47 mark, you'll notice Step 4 - it appears you skipped this step, and that's why you had bubbles with each application. With a heat gun, or a torch, the bubbles pop immediately. Also, with most epoxy / resins, you're supposed to sand between pours, so that the layers bond well.
heat gun is a good tip tyty
The before looks 1000% better than the after, I love the two-tone look is awesome in a major way 😊
I would have chosen a blonde over black finish 😊
Great job I will
Be doing this.
Really good 3 part video, Frank. How much did all materials cost for this project? Also, apart from the butcher block, was all materials sourced from Home Depot/Lowes?
Hi Frank I was wondering how many gallons of glaze in total did you use for the whole bar top.
Thank you really enjoy your video
Bad ASS im building one
You had absolutely no idea what you were talking about
You're supposed to pour it on not brush it.. Looks terrible.
Should’ve read the directions a little better, terrible job.