Re: Grand Concert for Freegift, Builder Swap
Posted: Sun Aug 16, 2009 3:19 pm
Thanks guys! Let's hope it comes together Dean!
Already I've been having some fun. Since I'm not smart enough to leave good looking spruce alone, I've been playing with toning the top. I've been having some telegraphing of my bracing thru the tops lately and I'm thinking that maybe it's actually being caused by sanding after bracing as opposed to actually showing thru from stress. So I sanded the top down thru 320 grit, and then I started my staining. Rub some water over the surface first so the stain doesn't grab to quick, then rub in the first transtint dye, honey amber, then reddish brown in kind of a sunburst pattern, then golden brown around the edges. When it dried it showed a double stripe across the top from sanding down the rosette in my sander. Futzed with it with some hand sanding and it seemed to go away, but when I rubbed on a coat of shellac it was back, subtle but irritating, kind of like a sanding burn.
So sanded it down with my orbital sander.
Then the amber rub.
Golden brown.
And the reddish brown. I hope you like an arched top Dean!
After it dried out and re-flattened itself, I did a little more color balancing, let it dry again and then lightly rubbed it down with some 400 grit which brings out the figure. Wiped it down and then rubbed on a shellac coat to protect it.
And this is how she's looking now, the sander stripes are gone.
Rosette and figure detail.
It's kind of strange doing finish work at this early stage and I'm not sure what kind of unseen blind alleys I'll run into down the line, but as always, it's an adventure!
Thanks for watching,
Joe
Already I've been having some fun. Since I'm not smart enough to leave good looking spruce alone, I've been playing with toning the top. I've been having some telegraphing of my bracing thru the tops lately and I'm thinking that maybe it's actually being caused by sanding after bracing as opposed to actually showing thru from stress. So I sanded the top down thru 320 grit, and then I started my staining. Rub some water over the surface first so the stain doesn't grab to quick, then rub in the first transtint dye, honey amber, then reddish brown in kind of a sunburst pattern, then golden brown around the edges. When it dried it showed a double stripe across the top from sanding down the rosette in my sander. Futzed with it with some hand sanding and it seemed to go away, but when I rubbed on a coat of shellac it was back, subtle but irritating, kind of like a sanding burn.
So sanded it down with my orbital sander.
Then the amber rub.
Golden brown.
And the reddish brown. I hope you like an arched top Dean!
After it dried out and re-flattened itself, I did a little more color balancing, let it dry again and then lightly rubbed it down with some 400 grit which brings out the figure. Wiped it down and then rubbed on a shellac coat to protect it.
And this is how she's looking now, the sander stripes are gone.
Rosette and figure detail.
It's kind of strange doing finish work at this early stage and I'm not sure what kind of unseen blind alleys I'll run into down the line, but as always, it's an adventure!
Thanks for watching,
Joe