After seeing the image that started that thread
<http://groups.google.com/group/alt.guitar/browse_frm/thread/ddcaeab050669abf/fb25c113046c2fe3?lnk=st&q=&rnum=1&hl=en#fb25c113046c2fe3>
I decided to try this out on a small scale.
My result left a little to be desired, but I figured I'd show the result
and tell what I did and what mistakes I think I made in the hope that the
information was helpful to someone else.
Instead of a guitar, I made a simple stupid box. The result can be seen
at <http://www.flickr.com/photos/39383723@N00/332778871/>.
The dye was Transtint 6023 Black thinned with alcohol.
The finish was ML Campbell Magnamax precatalyzed lacquer.
Procedure was to cut all the pieces to size, sand flat to 320 grit, then
apply dye, assemble, and finish.
I didn't have anything small enough to measure the dye properly so I had
to eyeball the mix and think I got it too heavy.
<http://www.onlinesciencemall.com> has a nice set of graduated cylinders
for 11 bucks that should address that problem in the future. Instead of
applying, letting soak in for a few seconds, and then wiping and letting
dry and repeating, I let the dye dry on the surface, and ended up having
to sand most of it off and start over.
Once the dye was applied I glued up the box prior to finishing. Once the
glue had set I shot a coat of finish and let it dry sanding hard then went
to work on it and found that the flat surfaces were no longer quite flat.
Next time I'd reflatten the exterior and redye as required before
finishing, or just not dye the exterior until after assembly. As it stood
I had to build up enough finish to be able to flatten the surface of the
finish without going through.
Sanded through the finish in a couple of spots anyway, took the dye with
it, so ended up with light spots on edges and corners--decided to let it
ride to see how it looked. Next time I'd touch it up. First time tried
to shoot the whole thing in one go. Ended up with very rough finish on
some surfaces. Sanded smooth as I could without going through, masked,
and did one surface at a time and it came out much more satisfactory.
Took three coats before I had a satisfactory degree of smoothness.
Next time I would have either prefinished the inside, left it
completely unfinished, or lined it with something--getting a smooth finish
on the inside of a box that size post assembly is problematical--could
have done it by brute force and awfulness if I had had another week or so
to work on it but as it stands I'm just going with what I've got.
Once I had all surfaces flat with 320, I went on down by grit to 800 then
shifted to Micromesh for final finish--this worked out well--note how
clearly you can see the reflection of the markings on the bandsaw fence in
the photo.
End result was that the figure on the maple was clearly visible and most
of the chatoyance was preserved. Next time will be better.
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
> I didn't have anything small enough to measure the dye properly so I had
> to eyeball the mix and think I got it too heavy.
> <http://www.onlinesciencemall.com> has a nice set of graduated cylinders
> for 11 bucks that should address that problem in the future.
I use a 10 ml syringe from the drug store. It comes with what looks
like a rubber stopper with a hole in the center. This stopper goes into
the top of the trans tint bottle, then the syringe goes into the
stopper. Invert the whole thing and then draw back the syringe plunger
to get what you need. I use to use this for measuring out liquid
medicine for my kid.
Measuring cups are calibrated in milliliters too, so calculating ratios
is easy if you stick to metric.
If you intend to experiment with differnet dye solution concentrations,
then you can make a concentrated solution, the dilute that one or more
times. Baby food jars make good "beakers".
Mitch
I think I would have opted to put the dye in the top coat. It can be
difficult to get an even coating but if you mix it lighter than you
want and build to the color you want I think it shows the wood better
than trying to get color evenly distributed via dying the wood. I've
done this with red, blue and yellow but never tried black.
BW
J. Clarke wrote:
> After seeing the image that started that thread
> <http://groups.google.com/group/alt.guitar/browse_frm/thread/ddcaeab050669abf/fb25c113046c2fe3?lnk=st&q=&rnum=1&hl=en#fb25c113046c2fe3>
> I decided to try this out on a small scale.
>
> My result left a little to be desired, but I figured I'd show the result
> and tell what I did and what mistakes I think I made in the hope that the
> information was helpful to someone else.
>
> Instead of a guitar, I made a simple stupid box. The result can be seen
> at <http://www.flickr.com/photos/39383723@N00/332778871/>.
>
> The dye was Transtint 6023 Black thinned with alcohol.
>
> The finish was ML Campbell Magnamax precatalyzed lacquer.
>
> Procedure was to cut all the pieces to size, sand flat to 320 grit, then
> apply dye, assemble, and finish.
>
> I didn't have anything small enough to measure the dye properly so I had
> to eyeball the mix and think I got it too heavy.
> <http://www.onlinesciencemall.com> has a nice set of graduated cylinders
> for 11 bucks that should address that problem in the future. Instead of
> applying, letting soak in for a few seconds, and then wiping and letting
> dry and repeating, I let the dye dry on the surface, and ended up having
> to sand most of it off and start over.
>
> Once the dye was applied I glued up the box prior to finishing. Once the
> glue had set I shot a coat of finish and let it dry sanding hard then went
> to work on it and found that the flat surfaces were no longer quite flat.
> Next time I'd reflatten the exterior and redye as required before
> finishing, or just not dye the exterior until after assembly. As it stood
> I had to build up enough finish to be able to flatten the surface of the
> finish without going through.
>
> Sanded through the finish in a couple of spots anyway, took the dye with
> it, so ended up with light spots on edges and corners--decided to let it
> ride to see how it looked. Next time I'd touch it up. First time tried
> to shoot the whole thing in one go. Ended up with very rough finish on
> some surfaces. Sanded smooth as I could without going through, masked,
> and did one surface at a time and it came out much more satisfactory.
> Took three coats before I had a satisfactory degree of smoothness.
>
> Next time I would have either prefinished the inside, left it
> completely unfinished, or lined it with something--getting a smooth finish
> on the inside of a box that size post assembly is problematical--could
> have done it by brute force and awfulness if I had had another week or so
> to work on it but as it stands I'm just going with what I've got.
>
> Once I had all surfaces flat with 320, I went on down by grit to 800 then
> shifted to Micromesh for final finish--this worked out well--note how
> clearly you can see the reflection of the markings on the bandsaw fence in
> the photo.
>
> End result was that the figure on the maple was clearly visible and most
> of the chatoyance was preserved. Next time will be better.
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> --John
> to email, dial "usenet" and validate
> (was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
Mon, Dec 25, 2006, 4:30pm (EST+5) [email protected] (J.=A0Clarke)
doth sayeth:
<snip> End result was that the figure on the maple was clearly visible
and most of the chatoyance was preserved. Next time will be better.
Looks like technically you've got it down pretty well. But I've
got to say, I didn't like the guitar, and I don't like the box - because
of the black finish in both cases. Just not appealing to me. On the
other hand, I think the same technique should look very nice using a red
stain.
JOAT
It's not hard, if you get your mind right.
- Granny Weatherwax
"MB" wrote...
> I use a 10 ml syringe from the drug store.
[...]
I think you hit the nail on the head - using measuring devices that will
allow repeatability is real important, IMO.
I use incremented stainless and aluminum teaspoon & tablespoon measures up
to 1/8 cup.
A lot of grocery store products - like jars of apricot halves and citrus
salad, and spaghetti sauce - still come in good reusable graduated Mason
jars. Great for mixing dyes. For storage, the Folgers coffee tubs are
great; I mark them with a masking tape label as to exactly what the mix is,
so everything is repeatable. The coffee tubs are also great for mixing
tinted lacquers. The cherry corner cab posted on a.b.p.w. used just under a
Folgers tub of tinted lacquer for 3 coats.
Also, the hardware store has G I A N T pyrex measuring cups that are also
great for mixing stains & super cheap.
--
Timothy Juvenal
www.tjwoodworking.com
On Wed, 27 Dec 2006 10:25:00 -0500, J T wrote:
> Mon, Dec 25, 2006, 4:30pm (EST+5) [email protected] (J. Clarke)
> doth sayeth:
> <snip> End result was that the figure on the maple was clearly visible
> and most of the chatoyance was preserved. Next time will be better.
>
> Looks like technically you've got it down pretty well. But I've
> got to say, I didn't like the guitar, and I don't like the box - because
> of the black finish in both cases. Just not appealing to me. On the
> other hand, I think the same technique should look very nice using a red
> stain.
That's OK, I don't really like the black either, but the intended
recipient was a goth girl who liked it very much.
> JOAT
> It's not hard, if you get your mind right. - Granny Weatherwax
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
Wed, Dec 27, 2006, 10:00pm (EST+5) [email protected] (J.=A0Clarke)
doth elucidate:
That's OK, I don't really like the black either, but the intended
recipient was a goth girl who liked it very much.
Ah, for a customer. Hell, as long as it made 'em happy, I'da
painted it with tar. Them Goth's got no taste anyway. I did like the
box otherwise.
JOAT
It's not hard, if you get your mind right.
- Granny Weatherwax
On Wed, 27 Dec 2006 18:25:18 -0500, J T wrote:
> Wed, Dec 27, 2006, 10:00pm (EST+5) [email protected] (J. Clarke)
> doth elucidate:
> That's OK, I don't really like the black either, but the intended
> recipient was a goth girl who liked it very much.
>
> Ah, for a customer. Hell, as long as it made 'em happy, I'da
> painted it with tar. Them Goth's got no taste anyway. I did like the
> box otherwise.
Christmas present actually--I was trying to figure out what kind of wood
would suit her (other than ebony, which was out of stock everywhere I
could get to in time to have it for Christmas) and saw that black-dyed
guitar and though to myself, "aha, that's _her_".
Did you notice the kind of greenish one in back of it? That's natural
finish lignum vitae. I like it a good deal more than the black myself.
Smells nicer too.
> JOAT
> It's not hard, if you get your mind right. - Granny Weatherwax
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
Thu, Dec 28, 2006, 1:00am (EST+5) [email protected] (J.=A0Clarke)
doth query:
Did you notice the kind of greenish one in back of it? That's natural
finish lignum vitae. I like it a good deal more than the black myself.
Smells nicer too.
Never even noticed it. Apparently the black box temporarily
blinded me. Can only see a small portion of it, but does seem more
appealing. Couldn't get the small tho.
JOAT
It's not hard, if you get your mind right.
- Granny Weatherwax