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Here's that burnishing video I teased a couple weeks ago....

Very informative, I have been sanding north to south and now, through rote, I see the technique is east to west. Lesson learned.
 
I've always gone with the grain as well, what is the benefit of across the grain other than being able to do it faster ?
 
Sanding with the grain is so ingrained in me that I never even thought about going East/West. I'll have to give it a go on my new canary wood neck. I'm probably going to fill the pores with shellac first though.

@mayfly you can get a variety pack of the paper that Aaron used on Amazon. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07DTGP1QT
 
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I was also going to ask about the pros/cons of sanding along vs. across the grain. I've done it with the grain and it turns out great, so I'm curious about the advantages of going across the grain.
 
I would think the primary advantage is speed. At that level of grit I don’t know how much of a risk tearing is. The more open grain wood would be more at risk, maybe start the lower grits with the grain and switch to the faster cross grain with the higher grits that benefit from more speed?
 
All I could think whilst watching was "go home and get your frickin shine box!!"
 
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