I'm working with a Western Red Cedar top, which is nice and ringy and I think will make a good guitar.
The only problem I'm facing is an aesthetic one; the color is a blah tan. I have experimented with dyeing some WRC with Jeff Jewett's aniline dye and the scraps look good; still, I have no experience with dyeing an entire top.
Do any of you have such experience, and can you give a brother some tips?
Dyeing WRC
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Dyeing WRC
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Re: Dyeing WRC
I did once try to dye bare wood, but it became very blotchy. After that I always sprayed colored laquer to make some color. So on the bare wood thing (keeping in mind you want to oil the thing) I cannot help you.
But there are you tube vids that can support you.
But what I know is that several light passes work better than one thick one.
Herman
But there are you tube vids that can support you.
But what I know is that several light passes work better than one thick one.
Herman
Last edited by Herman on Sun Dec 19, 2021 9:51 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Dyeing WRC
Thanks. I sent an email to Jeff Jewett about this but haven't heard back yet.
If I don't hear from him in a day or two, I think I'll tint some shellac with the dye and then spray it on.
If I don't hear from him in a day or two, I think I'll tint some shellac with the dye and then spray it on.
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Re: Dyeing WRC
I've emailed 5 different places that sell aniline dye, to enquire about wood prep for torrefied WRC. Haven't heard back.
So I took a scrap piece of the stuff - no sanding - and ran a few different tests. See captions.
Result: what works best is two thin coats of seal coat, let dry. Mix up a batch of shellac (I use sealcoat) and a few drops of dye to your taste. Pad it on fairly evenly, dry, and then add another coat or two to darken the color.
My goal was to make that blah piece of wood get the same color as a nice redwood. IMO I can make it a little better.
I think I'm confident enough to sand the top and apply some nice color.
So I took a scrap piece of the stuff - no sanding - and ran a few different tests. See captions.
Result: what works best is two thin coats of seal coat, let dry. Mix up a batch of shellac (I use sealcoat) and a few drops of dye to your taste. Pad it on fairly evenly, dry, and then add another coat or two to darken the color.
My goal was to make that blah piece of wood get the same color as a nice redwood. IMO I can make it a little better.
I think I'm confident enough to sand the top and apply some nice color.
- Attachments
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- Untouched torrefied WRC. No color at all. Blah.
- DSC00241.JPG (131.97 KiB) Viewed 1980 times
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- Left side aniline dye diluted in water on bare wood; right side shellac seal coat only
- DSC00242.JPG (145.08 KiB) Viewed 1980 times
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- Left side added more dye; right side is dye diluted in water over the seal coat. Still a little splotchy/
- DSC00244.JPG (145.48 KiB) Viewed 1980 times
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- Flipped the board over. Left side aniline dye dissolved in sealcoat and padded on; right side has two coats of sealcoat then a coat of shellac/dye mixture padded on. Not a good pic, but there is no splotchiness and I've learned how to control the color. Compared to pic #1 - no comparison.
- DSC00245.JPG (141.66 KiB) Viewed 1980 times
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Re: Dyeing WRC
I mix it with shellac like you are having success with.
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Re: Dyeing WRC
When I start dyeing the top, I will make a muneca type pad. I've just been using a rag, so the application has been a little uneven.
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