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"jtpr"

09/04/2007 8:21 AM

Match an older stain.

I need to replace a piece of molding around a door. The original
stain was "fruitwood", and is about 20 years old. I cut a piece of
molding to fit and stained it with minwax fruitwood, but the original
wood around the door is "orangier". Any ideas what I could do to
match it?

-Jim


This topic has 6 replies

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to "jtpr" on 09/04/2007 8:21 AM

09/04/2007 3:47 PM


"jtpr" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I need to replace a piece of molding around a door. The original
> stain was "fruitwood", and is about 20 years old. I cut a piece of
> molding to fit and stained it with minwax fruitwood, but the original
> wood around the door is "orangier". Any ideas what I could do to
> match it?
>
> -Jim
>

Buy several small amounts of stain and blend, blend blend. Unless you know
the exact brand used originally the color is going to be hard to match.

Bj

"Bigpole"

in reply to "jtpr" on 09/04/2007 8:21 AM

09/04/2007 12:17 PM

You can try Home Depot. I think they will mix a stain to match.

Ted
"jtpr" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I need to replace a piece of molding around a door. The original
> stain was "fruitwood", and is about 20 years old. I cut a piece of
> molding to fit and stained it with minwax fruitwood, but the original
> wood around the door is "orangier". Any ideas what I could do to
> match it?
>
> -Jim
>

Sl

"Shopdog"

in reply to "jtpr" on 09/04/2007 8:21 AM

09/04/2007 4:26 PM

Funny this question comes up now, Not more than an hour ago I had the same
problem, woodwork in bedroom that is more than 40 years old. the frames
around the windows are great but the moulding is all crapped up with various
layers of paints and holes. I took an original piece to Lowes and the girl
there matched it perfectly with an olympic stain.

Damn good thing, cause I didn't want to off shade too badly and I sure
didn't want to replace all the woodwork.

Searcher

n

in reply to "jtpr" on 09/04/2007 8:21 AM

10/04/2007 4:56 AM

I use dies in color complements to tone down off colors. Get a color
wheel for reference. www.homesteadfinishing.com has designed some
liquid concentrate TransTint dyes in many colors as well as the three
primaries for fine tuning. Mix with lots of different vehicles and
are transparent. Great forums there also.

On 9 Apr 2007 08:21:47 -0700, "jtpr" <[email protected]> wrote:

>I need to replace a piece of molding around a door. The original
>stain was "fruitwood", and is about 20 years old. I cut a piece of
>molding to fit and stained it with minwax fruitwood, but the original
>wood around the door is "orangier". Any ideas what I could do to
>match it?
>
>-Jim

Sl

"Shopdog"

in reply to "jtpr" on 09/04/2007 8:21 AM

09/04/2007 11:27 PM

geeze don't tell me that, it looks so good right now!

search

BA

B A R R Y

in reply to "jtpr" on 09/04/2007 8:21 AM

09/04/2007 6:51 PM

Shopdog wrote:
>
> Damn good thing, cause I didn't want to off shade too badly and I sure
> didn't want to replace all the woodwork.

Quite often, single stains mixed to match old work don't stay matched.

Dyes and pigments fade, wood changes color, clearcoats amber...


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