I'm staining a couple of new oak stair treads. I sanded down to 320,
and filled the grain with Behlen water-based filler. I waited over
night, then sanded it back to 320 (Behlen says to wait overnight
before using solvent-based finishes). I applied Minwax Provincial
stain, waited a few, and wiped it off. So far so good - looks nice,
good grain pattern, even-ish color (the treads are edge-laminated, and
the wood color varies some).
After a couple of hours I went back downstairs to do something else,
and to my horror, there are beads of drying stain all over the
surface. It looks like the stain is welling up from in the wood in
spots. I used a clean rag to wipe the surface, smoothing it out and
blending the color again, but even before I finished doing the second
tread the first one was beading again.
What the heck did I do? The workshop is at a normal temp & humidity -
about 75 degrees, inside-of-the-house conditions.
Thanks,
PK
Hi Pk,
That is not that unusual in oak for certain stains if the pores are not
completely filled. Some people watch the item for an hour or so wiping the
stain off as the stain leaves the pores. If you search the site below
using " oak bleeding" you will find some discussion of the problem or you
can register and ask your question directly. Generally get very good
answers. Cheers, JG
http://www.homesteadfinishing.com/phpBB2/portal.php
PK wrote:
> I'm staining a couple of new oak stair treads. I sanded down to 320,
> and filled the grain with Behlen water-based filler. I waited over
> night, then sanded it back to 320 (Behlen says to wait overnight
> before using solvent-based finishes). I applied Minwax Provincial
> stain, waited a few, and wiped it off. So far so good - looks nice,
> good grain pattern, even-ish color (the treads are edge-laminated, and
> the wood color varies some).
>
> After a couple of hours I went back downstairs to do something else,
> and to my horror, there are beads of drying stain all over the
> surface. It looks like the stain is welling up from in the wood in
> spots. I used a clean rag to wipe the surface, smoothing it out and
> blending the color again, but even before I finished doing the second
> tread the first one was beading again.
>
> What the heck did I do? The workshop is at a normal temp & humidity -
> about 75 degrees, inside-of-the-house conditions.
>
> Thanks,
> PK
It finally stopped after 18 hours of wiping periodically. Now I just
have to wait for it to completely dry before the poly.
Thanks!
On Mon, 17 Oct 2005 06:11:01 -0400, JGS <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Hi Pk,
> That is not that unusual in oak for certain stains if the pores are not
>completely filled. Some people watch the item for an hour or so wiping the
>stain off as the stain leaves the pores. If you search the site below
>using " oak bleeding" you will find some discussion of the problem or you
>can register and ask your question directly. Generally get very good
>answers. Cheers, JG
>
>http://www.homesteadfinishing.com/phpBB2/portal.php
>
>PK wrote:
>
>> I'm staining a couple of new oak stair treads. I sanded down to 320,
>> and filled the grain with Behlen water-based filler. I waited over
>> night, then sanded it back to 320 (Behlen says to wait overnight
>> before using solvent-based finishes). I applied Minwax Provincial
>> stain, waited a few, and wiped it off. So far so good - looks nice,
>> good grain pattern, even-ish color (the treads are edge-laminated, and
>> the wood color varies some).
>>
>> After a couple of hours I went back downstairs to do something else,
>> and to my horror, there are beads of drying stain all over the
>> surface. It looks like the stain is welling up from in the wood in
>> spots. I used a clean rag to wipe the surface, smoothing it out and
>> blending the color again, but even before I finished doing the second
>> tread the first one was beading again.
>>
>> What the heck did I do? The workshop is at a normal temp & humidity -
>> about 75 degrees, inside-of-the-house conditions.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> PK