George Hoskins
36 Cal.
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2006
- Messages
- 71
- Reaction score
- 0
Well folks after a long hard slog (3 years)I am finally in the home stretch with my 50 cal Lancaster build. I started this week to do some test patches of my stains on the extra wood from the stock, and as usual the experiment caused more questions than they answered.Here is what I am working with: 4 colors of Laurel Mtn Forge stain (Cherry, maple, nut brown and american walnut). I plan on sealing and top coating with Tru-oil. I have aqua fortis and lye available. The overall effect I am trying to achieve is slight red undertones with a medium (not too dark)overall look.So here are the questions. With regards to aqua fortis, it gives a nice brown to the stock but it is a little too dark. Can it be sanded back to lighten the overall look? Is stain normally used over af as the test patches I ran were very dark.The lye test patches were a lot lighter even with the stain added but when I added the inital lye wash there were areas that remained white (instead of going honey color) and I am not sure how this will affect the stain. The best color variations where when I added stain directly to the raw wood.The maple seemed to give a moderate amount of red but I found the cherry a little too deep red.Can these stains be "eased" back by sanding or steel wooling? Which gives the best exposure of the rays in the wood. I was under the impression af did that but as I say it's a little too dark for my liking.Will the stain directly on the wood give good exposure to the rays? My test blocks didn't have enough rays to check this. Any thoughts on this will be greatly appreciated. Gotta git this gun done so I can move on to other projects. Thanks for all your help. Cheers