Staining
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Staining
I am thinking of staining the mahogany neck on my acoustic.
I’m looking for the sequence others use successfully.
The stain I will be using is ColorTone liquid diluted with H2O.
So over all the steps I need to do are
Sealing, pore filling, finish coats.
Not sure if folks use the stain before sealing, or between sealing and grain filling, or between grain filling and finish coats.
If the stain is before the grain filler how do you avoid sanding through it?
I am not anywhere near ready to do this for real but will test it out on scrap mahogany until I am content with the results.
Thanks.
I’m looking for the sequence others use successfully.
The stain I will be using is ColorTone liquid diluted with H2O.
So over all the steps I need to do are
Sealing, pore filling, finish coats.
Not sure if folks use the stain before sealing, or between sealing and grain filling, or between grain filling and finish coats.
If the stain is before the grain filler how do you avoid sanding through it?
I am not anywhere near ready to do this for real but will test it out on scrap mahogany until I am content with the results.
Thanks.
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- Posts: 635
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2012 9:49 pm
Re: Staining
I always thought that stain needs to be applied to bare wood, the first element of a finish. I'm gonna learn something here....
peter havriluk
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Re: Staining
That's always been my thought too, though I suppose the overriding consideration is, "Whatever gives you the look that you want." Experimentation on some scrap wood will hopefully tell you what technique works best for you.
In the absence of other information, I'd go with: "apply stain, let it sit for a while, wipe it off when it's soaked in enough to give the color you want."
Don't believe everything you know.
Anything is possible if you don't know what you are talking about.
When things are bad, try not to make them any worse, because it is quite likely they are bad enough already. - French Foreign Legion
Anything is possible if you don't know what you are talking about.
When things are bad, try not to make them any worse, because it is quite likely they are bad enough already. - French Foreign Legion
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- Posts: 9
- Joined: Mon Apr 28, 2025 11:34 am
Re: Staining
With furniture I’ve always stained first. The issue I’ve had with a guitar neck is sanding some of the stain away when filling the grain. The instructions on the can of sealer and grain filling is apply sand back to bare wood. Apply more. The sanding back is where it has messed up the uniform stain.
Just wondering what others do.
Just wondering what others do.
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- Posts: 635
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2012 9:49 pm
Re: Staining
The nature of stain is to soak into the wood. That's not possible if there's sealer and filler present. There's lots more to be done and considered lest a perfectly decent instrument gets seriously compromised.
Somewhat like the yacht salesman said, 'if ya gotta ask the price you can't afford it.'.
Somewhat like the yacht salesman said, 'if ya gotta ask the price you can't afford it.'.
peter havriluk
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- Location: Ladysmith, BC
Re: Staining
I haven't done any staining in my instruments, but in trying to achieve better results in my pore filling, I've tried tinting some of them, which helps some in blending better, overall darkening, and increasing contrast. (At the moment I'm using AquaCoat untinted, and it works well that way). So you might find you can get where you want with a combination of stain and tinted filler. Here's a video I found some time ago from McPherson Guitars, filling a Khaya ("African Mahogany") guitar, using a very dark (pre-tinted) filler. I'm watching to see how you make out . . . .Bruce W.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QH75BRs88_w
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QH75BRs88_w
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- Joined: Mon Apr 28, 2025 11:34 am
Re: Staining
Thanks for the youtube link. That is informative.