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"taylor34"

03/05/2006 10:42 PM

Staining Question

Hello--

I'm in sort of bind, and maybe one of you would know the answer. I've
been staining my downstairs cabinets with mahagony gel stain from
minwax (wood is oak). In any case, when I first started doing it I read
the wrong instructions on the can (did the fiberglass door ones, had
never seen a can of stain with multiple ways to apply it). Instead of
wiping it off, I brushed it on thinly and then let it dry. The result
is a color pretty close to matching what it's supposed to be with a few
light spots.

I did all the cabinets a few months ago and thought nothing of it (was
waiting for countertop to come in). When I started to do the side
panels that attach to the cabinets after the countertop came in, I
noticed that it wasn't turning out as good as the first cabinets,
showing more brush strokes and stuff--that's when I noticed that I was
supposed to wipe it down after 3 minutes. That's where the issue comes
in--I tried the 'real' instructions, and it looks like crap. Instead of
mahagony, it comes out looking like a redish medium oak--definitely not
dark enough. I've tried additional coats, doesn't seem to really do
anything. Any suggestions? I'm pretty frustrated at the whole thing.
All I want is the color from my original way without the brush strokes
if possible. The brush strokes don't actually look that bad, they kind
of add an antiquish look. Thanks. Is there another stain that would
work better? If I had to I could strip off what I've done.

Taylor34


This topic has 3 replies

Td

"Teamcasa"

in reply to "taylor34" on 03/05/2006 10:42 PM

04/05/2006 2:35 PM


"taylor34" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello--
>
> I'm in sort of bind, and maybe one of you would know the answer. I've
> been staining my downstairs cabinets with mahagony gel stain from
> minwax (wood is oak). In any case, when I first started doing it I read
> the wrong instructions on the can (did the fiberglass door ones, had
> never seen a can of stain with multiple ways to apply it). Instead of
> wiping it off, I brushed it on thinly and then let it dry. The result
> is a color pretty close to matching what it's supposed to be with a few
> light spots.
>
> I did all the cabinets a few months ago and thought nothing of it (was
> waiting for countertop to come in). When I started to do the side
> panels that attach to the cabinets after the countertop came in, I
> noticed that it wasn't turning out as good as the first cabinets,
> showing more brush strokes and stuff--that's when I noticed that I was
> supposed to wipe it down after 3 minutes. That's where the issue comes
> in--I tried the 'real' instructions, and it looks like crap. Instead of
> mahagony, it comes out looking like a redish medium oak--definitely not
> dark enough. I've tried additional coats, doesn't seem to really do
> anything. Any suggestions? I'm pretty frustrated at the whole thing.
> All I want is the color from my original way without the brush strokes
> if possible. The brush strokes don't actually look that bad, they kind
> of add an antiquish look. Thanks. Is there another stain that would
> work better? If I had to I could strip off what I've done.
>
> Taylor34
>
Get some odorless mineral sprits, clean the cabinets with a soaked cotton
rag. Rinse, repeat.
If the marks do not come out all the way, sand them, clean again and
re-stain.

Dave

JM

Jim Moyseenko

in reply to "taylor34" on 03/05/2006 10:42 PM

04/05/2006 3:57 PM



taylor34 wrote:

> Hello--
>
> I'm in sort of bind, and maybe one of you would know the answer. I've
> been staining my downstairs cabinets with mahagony gel stain from
> minwax (wood is oak). In any case, when I first started doing it I read
> the wrong instructions on the can (did the fiberglass door ones, had
> never seen a can of stain with multiple ways to apply it). Instead of
> wiping it off, I brushed it on thinly and then let it dry. The result
> is a color pretty close to matching what it's supposed to be with a few
> light spots.
>
> I did all the cabinets a few months ago and thought nothing of it (was
> waiting for countertop to come in). When I started to do the side
> panels that attach to the cabinets after the countertop came in, I
> noticed that it wasn't turning out as good as the first cabinets,
> showing more brush strokes and stuff--that's when I noticed that I was
> supposed to wipe it down after 3 minutes. That's where the issue comes
> in--I tried the 'real' instructions, and it looks like crap. Instead of
> mahagony, it comes out looking like a redish medium oak--definitely not
> dark enough. I've tried additional coats, doesn't seem to really do
> anything. Any suggestions? I'm pretty frustrated at the whole thing.
> All I want is the color from my original way without the brush strokes
> if possible. The brush strokes don't actually look that bad, they kind
> of add an antiquish look. Thanks. Is there another stain that would
> work better? If I had to I could strip off what I've done.
>
> Taylor34

How about using a cloth instead of a brush to avoid the brush marks?

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to "taylor34" on 03/05/2006 10:42 PM

04/05/2006 1:23 PM


"taylor34" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello--
>

Snip


Any suggestions?

Do it wrong again.


I'm pretty frustrated at the whole thing.
> All I want is the color from my original way without the brush strokes
> if possible. The brush strokes don't actually look that bad, they kind
> of add an antiquish look. Thanks. Is there another stain that would
> work better?

Just about any brand would be better however stains on wood are typically
intended to be wiped off to expose the woods natural grain. Basically, the
first time, you painted your oak cabinets. Choose a darker stain.




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