Tung oil or
China wood oil is a
drying oil obtained by
pressing the
seed from the
nut of the
tung tree (
Vernicia fordii). As a drying oil, tung oil hardens (dries) upon exposure to air. The resulting coating is transparent and
plastic-like; a property which is exploited in most of its applications such as
wood finishing, as well as in the composition of
oil paints and
printing inks. Related drying oils include
linseed,
safflower,
poppy, and
soybean. The oil and its use are believed to have originated in ancient China and appear in the writings of
Confucius from about 400 B.C. Raw Tung oil tends to dry to a fine wrinkled finish; the US name for this is gas checking: this property was used to make wrinkle finishes, usually by adding excess cobalt drier. To stop this, the oil is heated to gas-proof it, and most oils used for coating are gas-proofed.