Pumpkin Stain?
- PipeAndPint
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Pumpkin Stain?
Does anybody here know of a stain that would give the finished briar an orangesque, sort of pumpkin-colored look?
- LexKY_Pipe
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- pipemanruss
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- Location: las vegas nv
Hello group.... I had to get in on this one. Have you considered a natural stain? Pumkin actually has a strong orange juice, which can be extracted easily by squeezing. Once squoze, take the juice and boil it in a stainless-steel pan for a few minutes to boil off some of the water, and the mix it with Everclear in a proportion that suits your strength requirements. Do be careful, and test it on a trash piece of wood first. It can stain your hands for days. The squoze punpkin makes good pie, though I wouldn't recommend it unless your squeezer is clean.
Matt
Matt
- PipeAndPint
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Natural stains were all we had before the inventions of those anillic chemistry which are not older than some 150 years, I guess.Nick wrote: snip …but probably won't go too far.
I believe, you could get far with those stains. But it's like with every organic stuff. You can't get any taste any time of year.
Sticking to some natural stains used since stone age might leave you with maybe like three tones only, from which one might be a weird purple, but they should last at least long enough to overcome the natural darkening of the briar. Probably even getting near something like contrast stain is impossible.
I would be very interested in that subject, too. We had a thread ’round red wine as a stain. I once came across a website from those freaks playing middle age in their spare time. They were widely discussing ancient recepies of colouring leather, textile and wood. Going to a shop and buying Attila’s coronation belt? Ha, they didn't have shops, so why should we? Interesting, but they did not have some pro for those themes amongst them and also could not report any interesting test outcomes…
I hereby promise to treat one of my next stummels with something unusual. To smoke it myself, so short and long term reports guaranteed. No matter what comes. If everyone does it with one stummel, we could collect some book of alchemy here… Still open for any suggestions for the weird substance to use.
Alexander Frese
www.quarum.de
www.quarum.de
- LexKY_Pipe
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As a newbie I am rummaging through some of the older threads and find a lot of interesting thoughts that are just being cut off in the middle of nowhere?
Thought I'd bring this one back for at least a brief recall.
On the very first pipe I ever made (out of a pre-drilled kit with fitted stem) I didn't have no fancy stain powders or leather dye or anything so I experimented with what was at hand which I could recall leaving heavy stains. I discarded the canned beetroot (for being too purplish red which I don´t quite enjoy in a pipe) and looked to the second best - red wine.
I wrapped the sanded pipe in a clear small plastic bag after having put a synthetic cork in the tobacco chamber and plugged the draft hole with the same material. I poured half a glass of the darkest red (Californian Syrah I believe) wine I had available at the time, sucked as much air as I could out of the bag and put the bag in a pan of water. I then slowly heated the pan til small bubbles appeared on the bottom of it, and pulled the pan of off the flame.
I let it all sit for about an hour to cool off, and then pulled the pipe out. At this stage I didn't know jack about understains or anything so I just thought that it looked a bit dull. To help it up a bit I put johnsons baby oil on it and started rubbing it with a cloth.
Well. I have called it Naive Elephant - for obvious reasons...
Sorry about the poor quality of the picture (and maybe of the pipe;)) I took it with my Cell phone....
Thought I'd bring this one back for at least a brief recall.
On the very first pipe I ever made (out of a pre-drilled kit with fitted stem) I didn't have no fancy stain powders or leather dye or anything so I experimented with what was at hand which I could recall leaving heavy stains. I discarded the canned beetroot (for being too purplish red which I don´t quite enjoy in a pipe) and looked to the second best - red wine.
I wrapped the sanded pipe in a clear small plastic bag after having put a synthetic cork in the tobacco chamber and plugged the draft hole with the same material. I poured half a glass of the darkest red (Californian Syrah I believe) wine I had available at the time, sucked as much air as I could out of the bag and put the bag in a pan of water. I then slowly heated the pan til small bubbles appeared on the bottom of it, and pulled the pan of off the flame.
I let it all sit for about an hour to cool off, and then pulled the pipe out. At this stage I didn't know jack about understains or anything so I just thought that it looked a bit dull. To help it up a bit I put johnsons baby oil on it and started rubbing it with a cloth.
Well. I have called it Naive Elephant - for obvious reasons...
Sorry about the poor quality of the picture (and maybe of the pipe;)) I took it with my Cell phone....