Can't figure this one out at all:
I've had one exterior side skin of birch all varnished for like a month. It's a nice deep amber which is what I like and what I wanted for the exterior. The brand of varnish only called for 3 coats, so it got 3.
But yesterday, I finish the 3rd coat on the OTHER skin, and it's a lot lighter.
Yes, the varnish came from different "cans," but it's the same lot. My hardware guy had to buy a case of 6, and I've been buying a can at a time to spread the expense.
Also, this second piece of birch was bought at a different time than the first. (Simply recall Ira screw-up #1, where I cut the skins incorrectly/cut two identical and not facing and had to run and buy two more sheets.) However, it's the same brand of birch, and I would bet the farm that it's the same "lot" too, as if this mattered anyway when it comes to wood.
Now I'm not going to SWEAR that I sanded this second piece between coats identically to how I did the first, but I CAN swear that I didn't do it THAT much differently. I just hand-sanded using fine grade, per instructions.
But they're not even close.
Should I take this second piece and HEAVILY sand down to the wood, and varnish, to make it darker? Or should I go with light sanding and more coats of varnish?
Tom, this might be the perfect excuse to go buy an orbital sander this weejend. Someone outbid me on that crab.