Bleaches in
Woodworking
Picking Your Finish
Purpleheart's Purple
How To Apply A Wood Finish
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Choosing The Proper Finish For Your Woodworking Project
If you've finished your woodworking project, congratulations. Now, what type of
finish do you want to put on it so that not only will you protect your hard work
for years to come, but also enhance its innate beauty? No matter what you
choose, you have to choose the right finish so that your hard work will be as
beautiful finished as it was unfinished. Choosing the wrong finish can make your
project look less beautiful than it should.
Well, here are some things to consider. You'll need to choose a finishing
product such as a varnish, lacquer, shellac, or polyurethane; you might also
need putty, wood filler, wax or polish. In addition, you'll need to choose from
water or solvent bases for the finishing products. Which to choose?
It might be confusing, but once you know what you're doing, you can group these
rather simply so that it's much easier to choose. Once you know what each
group's properties are, you can make a better and more informed choice about
what you'll need for your woodworking project.
Let's begin with stains. When you apply a stain to wood, you add color to the
wood without covering up the grain. This is a basic difference between staining
or painting something.
Stains that are pigmented are made when a pigment is combined with a liquid.
Usually, the pigment itself is in a dry colored powder before it is mixed with
the liquid. The liquid itself includes a binder that helps the pigment stick to
the wood surface. There's also a carrier that works with the binder. The pigment
does not dissolve in the binder, but are suspended in the liquid. In earlier
times, you could purchase the colored powders to make pigments up; these were
usually available in such colors as yellow, red, or burned charcoal, and were
made from different types of clay and crushed rock.
If a stain is a "dye stain," it's physically and chemically different than a
pigment stain is. Dye stains coat just like pigment stains do, but dye stains
dissolve in the carrier instead of being suspended in it. Because a dye stain
dissolves, it can deeply and easily penetrate the wood surface, unlike a pigment
stain. However, the dye stain particles are very small and somewhat translucent.
This, in turn, allows the wood grain to show through the dye stain.
One problem with stains of either kind, either pigments or dye, is that
oftentimes, their color does not apply evenly, especially on softer woods like
cherry, pine or birch. With these softer woods, you'll want to stain a piece of
scrap wood first to see if uneven coloring or blotchiness will be a problem. If
the stain appears to blotch or otherwise not appear uniform on your test piece,
you have other options you can try. For example, you can switch to a gel stain
or a water-based stain instead. Both of these types of stains only penetrate the
wood ever so slightly and can give you a much more even stain color.
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