I have a piece of furniture that is stained and already sealed in a
light color. I plan to use MiniWax stain product to make it darker.
Should this work? Even though MiniWax has some built in sealer should
I still use a Varnish to seal over that for it to properly seal since
I am going over an existing sealant?
On Tue, 5 Aug 2008 08:09:35 -0400, "dadiOH" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Albert wrote:
>> I have a piece of furniture that is stained and already sealed in a
>> light color. I plan to use MiniWax stain product to make it darker.
>> Should this work? Even though MiniWax has some built in sealer should
>> I still use a Varnish to seal over that for it to properly seal since
>> I am going over an existing sealant?
>
>Stain is meant for raw wood as it soaks in. You *could* use it on a
>pre-existing hard finish by first sanding that finish to provide a tooth for
>the stain but I'd suggest useing a toner - color in a clear finish. What
>finish? Same as what is on it now, probably lacquer (if commercially done)
>or polyurethane (if DIY done). In the case of the latter, the old surface
>needs to be lightly but totally sanded first. More than one coat of toner
>may be needed to get the color you want.
I tried Minwax Furniture Refinisher, followed by a light sanding (in my situation I was worried about sanding through the
mahogany veneer of a coffee table top), followed by Minwax's "Wood Prep" which helped prevent the stain from blotching in
the next step, when the stain finish was dark enough, wiped it off let it dry and put 4-6 thin coats of their Helmsman
Polyurethane Spar varnish, with a light 220-320 grit surface abrasion between coats. I was very pleased with the results.
Good luck, Joe.
You can use the Minwax Polyshades product. It is a polyurethane
(varnish) with color in it. You'll need to experiment to see if you
can darken up your project as desired. Maybe there is some back leg or
area you can experiment. One thing to watch for is to be very careful
in application because overlaps on slightly dried areas will be darker
than not over;lapped areas. Have to apply very evenly with this
product, evan on raw wood.
Light (very light) sonading would be good to get good adhesion.
On Aug 4, 8:41=A0pm, Albert <[email protected]> wrote:
> I have a piece of furniture that is stained and already sealed in a
> light color. =A0I plan to use MiniWax stain product to make it darker.
> Should this work? =A0Even though MiniWax has some built in sealer should
> I still use a Varnish to seal over that for it to properly seal since
> I am going over an existing sealant?
Albert wrote:
> I have a piece of furniture that is stained and already sealed in a
> light color. I plan to use MiniWax stain product to make it darker.
> Should this work? Even though MiniWax has some built in sealer should
> I still use a Varnish to seal over that for it to properly seal since
> I am going over an existing sealant?
Stain is meant for raw wood as it soaks in. You *could* use it on a
pre-existing hard finish by first sanding that finish to provide a tooth for
the stain but I'd suggest useing a toner - color in a clear finish. What
finish? Same as what is on it now, probably lacquer (if commercially done)
or polyurethane (if DIY done). In the case of the latter, the old surface
needs to be lightly but totally sanded first. More than one coat of toner
may be needed to get the color you want.
--
dadiOH
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"Albert" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:14520af5-7636-421e-a359-b71418f1632e@v13g2000pro.googlegroups.com...
>I have a piece of furniture that is stained and already sealed in a
> light color. I plan to use MiniWax stain product to make it darker.
> Should this work? Even though MiniWax has some built in sealer should
> I still use a Varnish to seal over that for it to properly seal since
> I am going over an existing sealant?
Should it work? NO! Will it work, that will be up to you to decide.
Adding a stain over a finish is more like adding a glaze/faux finish effect.
Yes you should add a protective finish over that however it is likely to
disturb the Miniwax coat.
To do it properly sand down to bare wood and use a stain that is the
color/darkness that you like, followed by a protective varnish.