DID YOU KNOW - There are 4 kinds of French Polisher out there So, be sure to pick the right one for you!
Antique Restorers, whose skills include the 19th century art of Traditional French Polishing, use shellac, alcohol and linseed oil to build up a one coat glossy finish to authentically restore furniture from that period. Discontinued commercially in the 20's in favour of superior cellulose lacquers, applied by spray and worked by hand - with stains, dyes, tints, shades, grain-fillers and stipples - this is the work of the Modern French Polisher.
Modern French Polishers can be found in furniture factories throughout the world, and the variety of finishes they produce can be seen in any good furniture store today. For authentic restoration of 20's Art Deco, to 60's Ercol, to 21st century designer pieces - and everything else in between - you need an experienced Modern French Polisher.
Franchised Repairers train for a few weeks and are taught to disguise minor scratches and dents in wooden furniture along with upholstery repair work. Working in situ and using specialised repair kits, this can be quite effective for minor damage.
Painter & Decorators sometimes pass themselves off as French Polishers. DIY products for sale in the Decorator's Merchants, in the hands of someone skilled with a brush, can be quite acceptable for ordinary internal joinery. But not, of course, for fine furniture, or where a "furniture quality finish" is desired, or if mere ordinary is not for you.
Polish can refer to a nationality, language, or culture from Poland. It can also refer to a substance used to make something smooth and shiny when rubbed on it.
a Polish is a Pole, or someone from Poland. unless you were talking about polish as in nail polish. then it is just paint i think.
Polish in Polish is "Polski".
The polish word for Polish is: Polski.
No. 'Polish', as in a person from Poland, is pronounced "POE-lish". The other 'polish', as in shoe polish, is pronounced "PAW-lish".
The noun polish is a common noun, as in "I am going to use some polish." The word polish is also a verb, as in "I will polish my shoes." The noun Polish is a proper noun as a word for the language of Poland, "They speak English and Polish." A proper noun is always capitalized. As an adjective, Polish is a proper adjective as in "They are a Polish family." A proper adjective is always capitalized.
I want to polish the medallion that the Polish government gave to my uncle. My boots could use a quick polish.
Polish in Polish is "Polski".
The polish word for Polish is: Polski.
No. Polish can be a verb, as in to polish a penny (clean or brighten a penny). Polish can be an adjective, as in "That man is Polish." Polish is used to describe people from Poland.
Polish polish Polish: when you are from Poland, you are Polish polish: like furniture polish or nail polish Trust me it is Polish and polish because It was a riddle on my test and I wrote those two words down and got it right.
Polish and polish. Polish as in the Polish Hotdogs. And polish as in I polish my nails
polish Goral is ...polish mountain.
Because i love to polish me toenails! I polish them everyday. I LOVE NAIL POLISH!
No. 'Polish', as in a person from Poland, is pronounced "POE-lish". The other 'polish', as in shoe polish, is pronounced "PAW-lish".
"Polish" with a lowercase "p" refers to the nationality or language of Poland, while "Polish" with an uppercase "P" refers to the action of making something smooth and shiny. They are spelled the same due to their historical development as words in the English language.
4 in Polish is "cztery". 4th in Polish is "czwarty".
Polish airforce = Polskie siły powietrzne
There are different types of polish. There are nail polish and body polish, which you can rub on all of the body.