DirtySteve
Ambassador of Hold My Beer
I'm already thinking of a new plan. It involves stripping it back down (with an actual stripper) to raw wood and starting over. I wasn't happy with the way the grain didn't pop when I did the tea wash and I think it's because there was still oil deep in the grain. If I strip it raw, then I can do another tea wash, then use some Keda dyes (the powder kind that you mix with water) to get my color. I've used them a few times now on other projects and they work great, I just haven't done it on a maple top.
I'm actually more excited to do this than to continue on with what I'm doing..
I'm actually more excited to do this than to continue on with what I'm doing..


