JJ

Johnny_A_58

12/04/2008 7:20 PM

Cherry Stain Over Oak??

Hi, My wife bought an oak side table at a yard sale today. It is oak that has been stained
what looks like maybe ash. She would like it to be finished cherry! Is there any way to do
that or am I out of luck? Thanks


This topic has 5 replies

bk

"bob kater"

in reply to Johnny_A_58 on 12/04/2008 7:20 PM

12/04/2008 7:14 PM

I've done it before and it looked great. I stripped the old finish off,
sanded then stained with min-wax cherry. If your looking for a little red
tint you probably won't get that without mixing. I did use a sealer first
though and it helped keep my color more uniform.
"B A R R Y" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 14:39:27 -0700 (PDT), Old Guy <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>>If gell stains will stain a fiberglass door, they will stain a
>>finished wood piece.
>
> Excellent suggestion, better than mine.
>
> I often forget that gel stains work in faux finishing, so they'd
> probably work well on finished pieces.
>
> ---------------------------------------------
> ** http://www.bburke.com/woodworking.html **
> ---------------------------------------------

OG

Old Guy

in reply to Johnny_A_58 on 12/04/2008 7:20 PM

12/04/2008 2:39 PM

Another choice:

I'd try using a gell stain over the ash-colored wood. The cherry tone
will be darker, and gell stains do NOT have to soak into the wood to
work properly. I'd opt for applying it, then quickly removing the
excess. If it is too light, do it again.

If gell stains will stain a fiberglass door, they will stain a
finished wood piece.

And In case you missed Barry's point--

Practice on the bottom of the table, until it your wife approves of
the stain appearance. Then put the finish over part of it and see if
you still like it.

Old Guy
\

On Apr 12, 3:11=A0pm, B A R R Y <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 19:20:53 GMT, Johnny_A_58 <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >Hi, My wife bought an oak side table at a yard sale today. It is oak that=
has been stained
> >what looks like maybe ash.
>
> How do you stain oak ash? =A0<G>
>
> To answer you question...
>
> You have two choices:
>
> - Strip the item to bare wood, and stain it the color you'd like.
> Follow with a clear coat. Oak stains very nicely and requires no crazy
> gyrations to get even coloring.
>
> - Use a tinted clear coat. =A0These are better sprayed, but Minwax
> "Polyshades" =A0is a home center product available as a brush-on
> formula. =A0Try it on the bottom, in an unseen area, to see if this is
> what you want. =A0Brushing on a tinted clear coat is more difficult than
> spraying as "lap marks" will show up where the bush marks overlap.
>
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
> Practice on the bottom of the table. =A0
>
> Got it? =A0<G>
>
> ---------------------------------------------
> **http://www.bburke.com/woodworking.html=A0**
> ---------------------------------------------

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to Johnny_A_58 on 12/04/2008 7:20 PM

12/04/2008 4:09 PM


"Johnny_A_58" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi, My wife bought an oak side table at a yard sale today. It is oak that
> has been stained
> what looks like maybe ash. She would like it to be finished cherry! Is
> there any way to do
> that or am I out of luck? Thanks

Oak looks like ash normally so that would be simple enough to do.

Cherry over oak is probably going to look like something you stained. If
she wants dark, consider fuming the oak. Or send her back out to the yard
sales until she comes back with a cherry table. Personally, I don't see
anything very natural looking coming out of this.

BA

B A R R Y

in reply to Johnny_A_58 on 12/04/2008 7:20 PM

12/04/2008 6:20 PM

On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 14:39:27 -0700 (PDT), Old Guy <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>If gell stains will stain a fiberglass door, they will stain a
>finished wood piece.

Excellent suggestion, better than mine.

I often forget that gel stains work in faux finishing, so they'd
probably work well on finished pieces.

---------------------------------------------
** http://www.bburke.com/woodworking.html **
---------------------------------------------

BA

B A R R Y

in reply to Johnny_A_58 on 12/04/2008 7:20 PM

12/04/2008 4:11 PM

On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 19:20:53 GMT, Johnny_A_58 <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Hi, My wife bought an oak side table at a yard sale today. It is oak that has been stained
>what looks like maybe ash.

How do you stain oak ash? <G>

To answer you question...

You have two choices:

- Strip the item to bare wood, and stain it the color you'd like.
Follow with a clear coat. Oak stains very nicely and requires no crazy
gyrations to get even coloring.

- Use a tinted clear coat. These are better sprayed, but Minwax
"Polyshades" is a home center product available as a brush-on
formula. Try it on the bottom, in an unseen area, to see if this is
what you want. Brushing on a tinted clear coat is more difficult than
spraying as "lap marks" will show up where the bush marks overlap.

Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.
Practice on the bottom of the table.

Got it? <G>

---------------------------------------------
** http://www.bburke.com/woodworking.html **
---------------------------------------------


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