This beeswax furniture polish recipe has two ingredients that will make wood furniture will shine. Just one coat of this simple, all-natural polish will restore beautiful color and grain.
As a beekeeper, this is one of my favorite ways to use beeswax! Make this recipe in just 15 minutes to add a beautiful natural shine to your wood for months.
You are watching: DIY Beeswax Furniture Polish Recipe (2 Ingredients!)
This DIY beeswax wood polish couldn’t be easier to make: its just beeswax and mineral oil. We actually used the beeswax we had leftover from our beehives last year, after we harvested the honey. We melt it down, add some mineral oil, let the mixture cool, then shine away!
This wood polish recipe is perfect for making any old furniture shine like new. The beeswax wood polish protects and conditions, leaving a natural finish.
Our post-and-beam home is built entirely of wood, hardwood floor to ceilings. So needless to say, we end up using a lot of furniture polish to keep things looking bright.
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Most of Brett’s family are amazing woodworkers, and we have so many beautiful furniture pieces they’ve made for us. To keep them all shining like new, we made this simple beeswax furniture polish. We even use it on our kitchen counters, which are butcher block wood.
I cook with fresh produce from my garden and from Misfits Market- they sell fantastic fruit, vegetables, & pantry staples at a discounted price. We get Misfit boxes every other week and love picking out seasonal produce for delivery. Get $10 off your first box by clicking here!
I have 2 great recipe for DIY Beeswax Lip Balm & DIY Beeswax Beard Balm that gets rave reviews. If there’s a local beekeeper in your area, I’d recommended starting there for wax, but if you buy online, make sure you get the good stuff!
I like that this is all-natural, and only has 2 simple ingredients. No chemicals, no junk, no ingredients you can’t pronounce. Just like with the food we cook, I like to be able to know exactly what I am using and eating around my house.
As a beekeeper, we save the leftover wax from when we harvest honey from our hives. Bees make the wax to create “cells”, which form that hexagonal honeycomb pattern. The cells can be used to lay eggs, raise brood, and keep honey that the bees store for the winter.
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The honey is stored in the hexagonal cells, and when the moisture has been cured out from the honey, the bees will cover the cells with a wax seal. This is called capping. It preserves the honey for the winter, and keeps the moisture from spoiling honey stores.
When we harvest honey, we scrape the wax to release the honey from the cells. Once the honey gets filtered into a separate bucket (which we then jar up and enjoy!) we are left with the wax. We melt the wax to remove any impurities, and then keep it to make great products like this beeswax furniture polish!
Here is a frame full of honey, perfectly capped in beeswax.
Using the polish is a simple process: use a microfiber cloth to apply the wax directly to the wood surface. Allow the wax polish to sit overnight, and gently buff off the excess in the morning.
Brett has a giant cherry wood desk that he and his dad built years ago. We added a little polish to the desk, and as you can see from the pictures, it looks brand new! This simple polish is great for refreshing any old furniture in your house. We’ll be using this recipe for years to come.
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Source: https://gardencourte.com
Categories: Recipe
This post was last modified on 31/10/2023 06:06
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