I'm glad to see some brand names and additional information about the finishes being used. In my experience the MOST frustrating aspect of oil finishes is the nearly total lack of information about what we're actually buying. I've seen "100 % Tung Oil" that was thin and clear as kerosene, and "100 % Tung Oil" that could pass for maple syrup, different brand names of course. OK, so, which is 100% pure tung oil??? The manufactures are not required to list ingredients on the cans - we're just expected to take their word for what's inside, & most ain't all that honest! I remember using store bought BLO which dried in a day (25 years ago), but the last few cans I've tried wouldn't dry in a month (& don't smell the same)? Recently I asked the store manager in a large woodworker's specialty store for tung oil, after a lengthy discussion with the other employees they decided that nearly ALL of the 'oil' finishes had some tung oil in them (Teak, Danish, etc.) Hummmmm, ok,? I've also learned to be careful about labels like 'tung oil finish' hint, it's Not tung oil!, what is it actually? heck if I know!
Lin-speed (linseed oil based, with additives), Teak oil (has nothing to do with teak trees), Tru-oil (it doesn't behave like an oil), and the Laurel Mountain finishes will all result in a pretty high gloss. Tung oil will not.