That looks really good! What technique did you use for the stripes?An old CVA pistol I rescued from the junk Cabinet a couple months ago. An old blanket prize that someone screwed up that I fixed. Has 2 coats of Aqua Fortis with a boiled Linseed oil and turpentine mix for a finish. The stripes are Fake.
This was an experiment for the rifle I am currently working on which has a totally plain maple stock. I tried several different things, Potassium Permanganate, Frieberg Leather Dye, India Ink, etc. all of which I rejected for various reasons. I used Angelus black Leather dye, it is alcohol based so it dries quickly and actually penetrates the wood and doesn't bleed like water based Frieberg. Used different sizes of cheap artist's brushes to paint it onto the bare wood and made sure there was no pattern to it. I then applied the Aqua Fortis and blushed it. When i do the rifle stock I am going to use wider stripes with narrower spaces between them, I think that will look better. Going to do some more test strips from the actual rifle stock to make sure how I will do it.That looks really good! What technique did you use for the stripes?
I have seen a number of guns over the years that people have artificially striped with a blow torch. I have to say yours is the best looking one I have ever seen. I would make one suggestion. The picture is of an actual curly maple pistol stock. Look at how the grain runs through the handle on it.I recently reworked a Jukar with a beech stock. I used Feibing's Leather Dye . . .Chocolate or dark brown I think. It worked very well. I tried to faux stripe it, but didn't do as nice of a job as the one pictured above with painted stripes. Instead, I wrapped it in wire and burnt it with a propane torch. It worked ok, BUT the wood is so soft that the wire wrap dented the stock, which still bugs me. . . but I think it is much improved from what I started with. (Worked the lock panels a bit and thinned the chunky-ness down some. I'm a novice builder at best.)
You will not know until you try it on your specific piece of stock wood.Have any of you ever used Aqua Fortis on a Beech Cva stock?
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