Thank you very much. I'm starting a 1942 vintage truck tailgate bench tomorrow and now I don't have to visit the local distributor of old barn wood and posts. Thank you again, your project looks great!
Awesome for pine wood ... i really love this video i already pretty much knew how to do it but i love the other details u have done ..you really made it look nice .i know what i want to do with some of my wood shelves .. hey was wondering can you do another video with like a white wash and age it same way and clear coated ? that would be really cool as well ..thanks so much for posting .:) and to the thumbs down this was by far an awesome video if you have nothing nice to say about it then lets see your work !!
Funny, I used early american and will add dark walnut on top but can't find a video that gives it that real uneven rustic, not so dark finish that's more natural yet weathered (and not washed)...but good job on this one!
love that look. one question. on the sample that you used for demonstration. what kind of wood was that, that you used. it looked like just pine. am i correct. pine.
Looks like you could also stain the entire thing with the darker stain. Then sand the top and restain with the lighter stain and it would turn out good also if not better
Hey! Thats a very nice finishing! Do you use pore covering/wood filling before applying the stain? I have tried on pine pallet wood and it sucks all the stain before I can remove it...
Nadia Karpov aaah i see. Well, I learned a lot from your video and used it as a guide for my own project making this lamp m.imgur.com/gallery/QGGFnQN so your inspiration travels far my friend
@@ChristianKanzieNilsson Hi. Nice lamp, but I do believe you've lost the beauty of the original weathered beams that have almost driftwood effect about them. You know, it's relatively easy to make the effect you created using brand new wood (as Nadia demonstrated), but pretty hard to achieve this driftwood effect. So why eliminating what you had naturally? I personally would prefer much better using the beams as they were (plus cleaning and probably lightly coating for wood preservation). Insted you got this standard "rustic" look. But hey, if you like it - fine, I just couldnt help ranting as I do like this very driftwood effect. Have a nice day and more great projects!
@@vsemprivet to wash his own right :) I couldn’t be happier, it exaggerated the natural wood just the way I wanted it to and it’s been a year or more and every morning I see it and think “nailed it” 😬
Definitely the best aging and distressing wood video on RUclips so far that I have seen!
I agree...awesome work
oh also what i really like was your video was straight to the point and no nonsense talking thank you for that ! :)
Thank you very much. I'm starting a 1942 vintage truck tailgate bench tomorrow and now I don't have to visit the local distributor of old barn wood and posts. Thank you again, your project looks great!
Really love this idea . Thanks to share.
Love it! Thank you for this video. It will save me thousands of $$$$
Nice, concise and clear. Do you think it's possible to apply the same technique on furniture? I would love to see a video on that.
Awesome for pine wood ... i really love this video i already pretty much knew how to do it but i love the other details u have done ..you really made it look nice .i know what i want to do with some of my wood shelves .. hey was wondering can you do another video with like a white wash and age it same way and clear coated ? that would be really cool as well ..thanks so much for posting .:) and to the thumbs down this was by far an awesome video if you have nothing nice to say about it then lets see your work !!
beautiful. perfect colors. perfect look.
great video :) what colors of stain did you use?
Hi, great video! What kind of wood did you use?
Pine
Thanks, just what I was looking for.
How come the boards are different at the end than the ones you started with??
Funny, I used early american and will add dark walnut on top but can't find a video that gives it that real uneven rustic, not so dark finish that's more natural yet weathered (and not washed)...but good job on this one!
love that look. one question. on the sample that you used for demonstration. what kind of wood was that, that you used. it looked like just pine. am i correct. pine.
Yes on the link it says pine board
Good ideas, thanks.
Looks like you could also stain the entire thing with the darker stain. Then sand the top and restain with the lighter stain and it would turn out good also if not better
Hey! Thats a very nice finishing!
Do you use pore covering/wood filling before applying the stain?
I have tried on pine pallet wood and it sucks all the stain before I can remove it...
Maybe a finer sanding will help
On poplar and pine, using “pre stain conditioner” will keep the stain from being blotchy.
and how we make joint ?
Love it looks amezing 😍
thanks 4 this tutorial
Great video but I don't understand the point of switching to black and white when trying to show the colouring of stain
Hi Christian! thank you for your comment. It was not on purpose, it was a program glitch. Sorry!
Nadia Karpov aaah i see. Well, I learned a lot from your video and used it as a guide for my own project making this lamp m.imgur.com/gallery/QGGFnQN so your inspiration travels far my friend
@@ChristianKanzieNilsson looks sooo cool! great job! :)
@@ChristianKanzieNilsson Hi. Nice lamp, but I do believe you've lost the beauty of the original weathered beams that have almost driftwood effect about them. You know, it's relatively easy to make the effect you created using brand new wood (as Nadia demonstrated), but pretty hard to achieve this driftwood effect. So why eliminating what you had naturally? I personally would prefer much better using the beams as they were (plus cleaning and probably lightly coating for wood preservation). Insted you got this standard "rustic" look. But hey, if you like it - fine, I just couldnt help ranting as I do like this very driftwood effect. Have a nice day and more great projects!
@@vsemprivet to wash his own right :) I couldn’t be happier, it exaggerated the natural wood just the way I wanted it to and it’s been a year or more and every morning I see it and think “nailed it” 😬
thnx man....!
what is the 1st stain u used?
Provincial
thanks brother.
Thousands of lifetime projects with Woodglut plans.
Tip: watch at x1,5 speed. Thank me later
Please stop doing that black and white effect.... But perfect work
sorry!!! that was a program glitch and we could not fix it. We did not do it on purpose :)
Hahahahahaha you are a cheater 1st time show you other wood and again show you other
Woodprix is a solid company with solid woodworking plans.