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| Wood Finishing and Painting | 
02-20-2004, 11:50 PM
| | | Bleaching wood | 
02-21-2004, 01:13 AM
|  | Member | | Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 337
| | Re: Bleaching wood My friend had a gun stock do the same thing. It was birch. He just left it as is. He sold the gun tho. I never tried to bleach wood. I have had some disappointing experiences with stains tho.
__________________
Wattles and Daub.
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02-21-2004, 02:51 AM
|  | Moderator | | Join Date: Dec 1969 Location: Arizona
Posts: 9,373
| | Re: Bleaching wood Is it something you can paint? If not and it were mine, I would probably try a piece of the same wood with some minwax prestain sealer and then try a gel stain over that...just a thought! ??? | 
02-21-2004, 06:27 AM
|  | Moderator | | Join Date: Dec 1969 Location: Southwest Missouri
Posts: 1,226
| | Re: Bleaching wood Good Morning
I have used wood bleach before -- tried 2-3 different brands,but like Klean Strip best. I mostly use it on carvings of white animals or carving that I want to look evenly all off white.
This stuff is pretty potent--best used outdoors or with good venting. And the wood must dry thoroughly afterwards before you seal/finish.
If you still have piece of the wood you used for the carving, I'd try to recreate the stain mishap on the scrap--then try bleaching it to see what it does---BEFORE applying it to your carving.
Another techique I've tried when I've not been happy with a staining process that had some really uneven staining results or a bad color, put the stain in your airgun/airbrush and apply a light, but even coat of stain on it and DO NOT wipe it off. A furniture refinisher taught me this one.
Good luck. Sometimes we learn more from the mishaps than the successes.
Donna T
__________________
....carving in SW Missouri since 1989...
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02-21-2004, 08:48 AM
|  | Moderator | | Join Date: Dec 1969 Location: Arizona
Posts: 9,373
| | Re: Bleaching wood thats basically what the prestain sealer does, it coats the entire piece and doesn't let the stain soak in unevenly, then the gel stail can be controlled to put where you want it. I posted that note and the more I think about it, the more I think it would be an easy solution..let us know. | 
02-21-2004, 01:38 PM
| | | Re: Bleaching wood Hey thanks a bunch gang. Now I have some things to try which is much better than where I was before. Will have a picture when it is done.
Barb  | 
02-21-2004, 03:27 PM
|  | Senior Member | | Join Date: Nov 2002 Location: SEKansas, Born and raised a Jayhawker
Posts: 6,428
| | Re: Bleaching wood Plain Bleach of severl coats will bleach the wood out. Let ir dry completely.
However, If you can paint it like Dave said, May be the better choice or what Donna sugjestd to do as I believe the product she used is meant for wood where the plain Bleach isn't.
I do know that once it is bleached, It is hard to get it back to natural wood. Had some kitchen cabinets that were Picked a from of bleaching and after 6 weeks of stripping and washing,sanding, and refinishing 43 doors and drawers, we were done. | 
02-21-2004, 05:55 PM
| | | Re: Bleaching wood Well, just hurry it up, Barb!!! LOL I want to see that carving!
Hugs :-)
Teri | 
02-22-2004, 04:46 PM
| | | Re: Bleaching wood Well Donna, I found some wood bleach but it is saying not to apply to wood with any oil or stain added. What do you think? :P | 
02-22-2004, 05:02 PM
| | | Re: Bleaching wood This will get a bit messy, but will probably work. First use one of those spray-on strippers, and follow the directions to get all the old finish off. Then mix up a mild solution of hydrogen peroxide from the pharmacy (maybe a 50/50 mix with water) and soak the piece in that overnight. It is a fairly mild bleaching agent and I don't think it will damage the wood, or bark. Next day soak it for a while in plain water to rinse and then let it dry. I've never done this whole procedure, but have used the hydrogen peroxide to mildly bleach some wood, and it worked fine.
Al | | Thread Tools | | | | Display Modes | Linear Mode |
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