Clear coating in a professional manner with any type of consistency takes years to learn the tricks. And every time you use a different product, different reducer, or catalyst, it changes again. This is a profession in itself that I have gained a lot of respect for.
Back in the 60’s and 70’s they used to do a lot of finished woodworking on homes with natural wood. It’s rarely done any more. Everything comes out pre finished typically using lacquer based products. Painting contractors in those days had their specialist that did most of their clear coating on doors, windows, and stair case rails that were installed first, then stained and finished. They even finished kitchen cabinets after install in those days.
As time went on more and more of the painters came in before the carpenters and pre finished the trim and doors before installing them. And the cabinet companies started pre finishing the boxes before installing them too. Then the door supplier companies started pre finishing everything prior to delivery.
By the early 80’s you rarely saw anything but high end custom homes that the finish carpenter used raw finished wood and it was finished by the painter. That even disappeared as the Mc Mansion days started and they started building huge housing developments in a mass production style, and White painted trim work came into style as they cut costs and used MDF instead of clear vertical grain fir , maple, red oak, mahogany, and even white pine.
The shift in materials types and production style installation required Less woodworking skill and more bondo to be a finish carpenter. Prices dropped dramatically for finish carpentry and finish contractors, and a lot of the really talented seasoned finish carpenters faded into the sunset. My Dad, grand dad, and I were among them….. The art of finish clear coating in the housing industry completely disappeared too….. Auto clear coating is the only thing left still done by hand I believe. Most everything else is automated. Kirk