OK....so I may be a little OCD (actually, if you are truly OCD, it should be CDO so that it's in alphabetical order
) Anyway, small things I make out of any type of wood, like powder horn butt plugs and stoppers, loading blocks, knife handles, etc.) I usually finish in an unusual way. I put the part in a stainless steel bowl and cover it with Watco Oil. Then I cover the bowl with a clear plexiglass lid that has a silicone gasket and is set up with a vacuum gage and a small brass valve. I draw a vacuum on the bowl with a vacuum pump. The oil immediately foams around the wooden part as the air trapped in the cellular structure of the wood finds its way out. As soon as the foaming stops or slows way down, I break the vacuum and the oil is driven deep into the wood as the air has been displaced and atmospheric pressure forces the oil into the wood. I then take the part out and wipe it down and put it in the sun to polymerize. It almost plasticizes the wood.
I did this to an entire gunstock at one point with polymerized tung oil by vacuum bagging the entire stock like you do to cure composite structures. It worked great....but I decided it was really overkill.