stevew2 wrote:Shadowsong wrote:Beautiful & thoughtful present.
Quite a nice talent you have
I esp like the tung oil & poly finish.
I restored the finish to my 100 yr old piano with a similar formula.
I forgot what it was but it is hard work especially if you are doing a big upright piano.
Your wood is glorious
resembles brazilian red wood.
My piano which is made by len Pratte in Montreal in the early 1900's is a sort of braziilan tigers wood.
Maybe you can identify it.
I can tell you it took about a month to do almost a dozen coats of the finish & actually lost sensation in my pinky from the many hours a day that I spent on it. I look back now & wonder how I did it but once get started on something I need to make sure its done right.
I'm very proud of it as the only wood work I did before that was to refinish my drum kit.

Very nice, What is the inside like?, does it hold a tune, do have the orginal ivories?
You sound like you know about pianos.
I got it at the Salvation Army Xmas 2001.
I was just fooling around playing nothing on it & a woman came over & thanked me for the lovely music.
I was surprised as I was just laying my hands & just letting my fingers move where they wanted & that was it...music???
so I left it as it's not like you can carry it home but I couldn;t stop thinking about it.
I told my mom about it & she said I should get it as she'd give it to me for Christmas.
It does have most original ivories. Luckily when I took the piano apart I found a few original ivories that were under the keyboard. I still needed about 5 so I found old ivories that matched the color of mine & glued them to the keys where they were missing. I did have to do some sanding to get a perfect fit but it came out so that I can hardly find the ones I replaced.
All the people I called to do the piano would not go thru the trouble of getting the real ivory. They wanted to strip all the ivory & replace them all with plastic.
They said if a few came off then the rest would eventually come off. Well maybe but they seemed to be on ok & I wanted a piano with real ivory keys...Carnage!!!
Also got hefty quotes for refinishing with no guarantees so I decided I would try to do the work myself...LOL
I had it tuned after I finished the work. I haven't had it tuned since so I don't really use it.
I think he tuned it down a small bit off the A I think maybe 438 to give the strings/sound board a chance to stretch as it may not have been tuned in a long while.
He was going to take it up to tune in 6 mo or so but I never desired to spend the $ to retune it as it still sounded ok to me.
I just been trying to check the construction & it looks like it was made to the best of its day.
It has underdampener which is the best & it looks like its a diagonal soundboard which gives you the best sound & it is 52 inches tall so it has a nice size soundboard.
It was a long time ago but I seem to recall that the movement at least the keys were marked from Germany. I guess they used some parts from other countries.
Found this cool article about the builder of the piano...
The piano carries both the LEN (Louis Etienne Napoleon) Pratte name as well as Antonio Pratte under the top cover...
http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/ ... RTU0002850
Yikes found one for sale
this one has not had a nice life...seems it spent all of its life in Montreal.
Pianos do not like changes in temperature or humidity.
Still, I'd love to have the piano bench as I have an old organ bench
http://montreal.kijiji.ca/c-acheter-et- ... dZ85044600
In all honesty mine doesn;t look as red..that's the flash bringing out that color.
In natural light its much darker...
Sorry for hijacking the thread but it was nice walking down memory lane.
I don't think I would ever do the work I did again. I worked an easy 6 weeks on it but I'm glad I was able to do it...
