Staining Technique
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- Posts: 177
- Joined: Fri Apr 24, 2015 2:34 pm
Staining Technique
What is the benefit of setting the stain by lighting it on fire while the alcohol is still wet? As opposed to just applying a few coats, letting the alcohol flash off by itself, and letting the pipe sit with the stain on for a day or two.
Acting like a loon in the front yard, close to the road.
Re: Staining Technique
you don't have to wait a day or two... instead just a few minutes
Re: Staining Technique
You don't have to burn it either, I prefer to just use a heat gun, less chance of scorching.
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- Posts: 177
- Joined: Fri Apr 24, 2015 2:34 pm
Re: Staining Technique
So then why set it on fire? What's the point?
Maybe my denatured alcohol is too potent? As I coat the pipe, the alcohol flashes off within a few seconds just in the open air. So a heat gun or fire seem counter productive.
I guess what I'm asking is more, what function does adding any sort of heating to the staining process accomplish?
Maybe my denatured alcohol is too potent? As I coat the pipe, the alcohol flashes off within a few seconds just in the open air. So a heat gun or fire seem counter productive.
I guess what I'm asking is more, what function does adding any sort of heating to the staining process accomplish?
Acting like a loon in the front yard, close to the road.
Re: Staining Technique
once its dry you can sand at the same grit or a higher grit.. I don't always want to wait till it dries, so I set it aflame and biddabam I can sand it after a few minutes vice the next day
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- Posts: 177
- Joined: Fri Apr 24, 2015 2:34 pm
Re: Staining Technique
Mine looks like it dries within a minute or so. I am using powdered dye mixed into denatured alcohol.
What do you guys use?
What do you guys use?
Acting like a loon in the front yard, close to the road.
Re: Staining Technique
I've always had a sneaking suspicion that the sole purpose of lighting stain on fire was to look cool in YouTube videos.
Ryan Richardson
R2 Pipes/Ryan's Luxury Goods
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"You can't convince a stupid person that what he's doing is stupid, because the stupidness inside him is telling him that it's smart"
R2 Pipes/Ryan's Luxury Goods
______________________________________
"You can't convince a stupid person that what he's doing is stupid, because the stupidness inside him is telling him that it's smart"
Re: Staining Technique
Time is the main thing, faster it sets the faster I can get on with other processes, also though I think warming the pipe first helps it soak in deep, I may be wrong but it makes me feel better.
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Re: Staining Technique
I have the same question as clickklick, why would you need to wait a day or two? Alcohol in a thin layer like that will evaporate in seconds to minutes.jogilli wrote:you don't have to wait a day or two... instead just a few minutes
So as a time-saver, I would think it would only save a few minutes?
Re: Staining Technique
When you are sanding for contrast, it is much less gooey, less likely to fill a high-grit paper, if it has sat for a day rather than a few minutes. I'm not sure what is evaporating or hardening in the dye, but that's just what practice shows.
ALL YOUR PIPE ARE BELONG TO US!
Re: Staining Technique
Sasquatch wrote:When you are sanding for contrast, it is much less gooey, less likely to fill a high-grit paper, if it has sat for a day rather than a few minutes. I'm not sure what is evaporating or hardening in the dye, but that's just what practice shows.
It will be the oils drying/curing.
Re: Staining Technique
what Sas said.... what Chris said.. you asked why.. we told you why.. if you don't want to do it don't...
and as chris mentioned warming it up helps it soak in... and there are various ways to do that.. sometimes I pour boiling water over the pipe.. heat it up with a heat gun.. and then stain... you get a deep contrast... some guys wrap the pipe with hot washcloths before applying water based stain.. again to get it to soak in at higher grits...
find what's right for you and the finish your after..
james
and as chris mentioned warming it up helps it soak in... and there are various ways to do that.. sometimes I pour boiling water over the pipe.. heat it up with a heat gun.. and then stain... you get a deep contrast... some guys wrap the pipe with hot washcloths before applying water based stain.. again to get it to soak in at higher grits...
find what's right for you and the finish your after..
james