Quick Tip: Grain Raising Prevents Rough Finishes

Water-based finishes raise the grain of wood, leaving a rough surface even after careful sanding. Professional finishers deliberately raise the grain first to prevent this problem in the final finish.

The Simple Process

Wipe your sanded piece with a damp cloth. Let it dry completely. The wood fibers swell and stand up. Sand lightly with fine grit to remove the raised fibers. Now water-based finish goes on smooth.

Wood grain texture close-up

When to Skip This Step

Oil-based finishes dont raise grain significantly. If youre using polyurethane or Danish oil, grain raising isnt necessary. The technique applies specifically to water-based products.

Common Errors

Using too much water floods the wood and causes problems. A slightly damp cloth works best. Also avoid sanding too aggressively after raising grain as you want to remove just the fuzz, not dig into fresh wood.

This quick step takes five minutes and eliminates that frustrating rough texture in your final finish.

Jennifer Walsh

Jennifer Walsh

Author & Expert

Senior Cloud Solutions Architect with 12 years of experience in AWS, Azure, and GCP. Jennifer has led enterprise migrations for Fortune 500 companies and holds AWS Solutions Architect Professional and DevOps Engineer certifications. She specializes in serverless architectures, container orchestration, and cloud cost optimization. Previously a senior engineer at AWS Professional Services.

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