Chris Paulick wrote:
OK , that's what I made it. I ran into some problems that I think I sort of figured out somewhat.
First I made the mistake of leaving the inner wool compressed and when I loaded it up and began to make swirls it just put streaks into the existing build. I started the build using Robbies method that I got from the video. I started out that way and when I started to have some difficulty I changed the method to loading the muneca. So after reading that artical yesterday I decided to try the conventional way , if there is such a thing. Now after loosing the muneca it started to lay down some finish. For some reason I don't seem to be getting the cloud trace so much or I'm just having a hard time seeing it. And the oil seems to get laid down a lot and not gas off like in Robbies video. I also noticed that my T shirt material seemed to absorb more then lay down. So I found an old pair of Pajama bottoms that are a thin tight weave material a little thinner then a bed spread that seem to be working better. I don't know what it is made from but it's some kind of blend as the T shirt was cotton. Any idea as to why my oil doesn't seem to flash off ? As well as the shellac? Oh yeah, after scratching the finish I pretty much sanded back to where there was a couple of sand throughs and I just finished up a bodying session and I'm having a beer. I was starting to get frustrated.

From what you said. I believe two things and surmise one. First you are loading too much shellac and alcohol and oil onto the face of the pad, and you are not tapping the pad till the load is intermingled with the residual in the inner pad. these thing I am almost dead certain of. I surmise that also you did not allow the shellac in the inner pad to harden to the state of soft toffee. If the shellac in the inner pad is wet the load does not start a wicking process but rather just causes shellac to stick to the outer pad and lays down very little and usually removes more than it lays down.
The way the body session should work is that you start with a inner pad that is saturated in 2# shellac and allowed to dry to a near solid state. Then the outer pad is wrapped around the inner pad and a fresh load of 4-6 drops shellac and 3-4 drops of alcohol and 1-2 drops of oil is applied to the outer pad face. Then the outer pad is tapped firmly on a sheet of white paper till the report pattern left on the paper is spotted not solid. This has worked the alcohol and fresh shellac into the residual semi hardened shellac in the inner pad and caused the nearest part of the residual semi hard shellac in the inner pad to be softened enough to wick out thru the outer pad along with some alcohol. The shellac that is being transferred to the surface will not be very wet at all. It will be more than slightly thicker viscosity than straight 2# shellac if pored straight from a bottle. If the shellac is to wet you can not see the vapor cloud because the wetness will hide it. If at any time you can not see the vapor cloud for about a second behind you but shellac is being transferred then you can know for sure you are too wet or in need of a fresh load.
it also sounded like you may be adding too much oil though that is not a major concern but may hinder seeing the vapor cloud