I can't believe you brushed the whole fence. I bought a cheap bug sprayer and went to town. It went very fast and turned out great. I probably used an extra gallon and a half maybe 2 gallons but it was so worth it for the time I spent on it I was done and maybe 2 hours from start to finish the cleanup. Then I just let the cheap bug sprayer dry up before I disposed of it. My neighbor was an old commercial painter and he told me about that so with his knowledge I wasn't going to question him I just tried it and it was the best thing I could have done. But my hat's off to you and all the brush strokes that you had applied to that fence man that looked like a lot of work
Thank you so much for this video, very informative. I may have missed it in the video, if I did I apologize. Can u tell me the color you went with, I know the brand is Valspar
I would pressure wash and it says to prepare previously stained surfaces with Valspar wood cleaner or Valspar all in one wood prep. You shouldn’t need to sand unless there a certain spots you want to.
How many coats did you apply with the brush? Because I feel the same way like I had to go over it a couple times because the wood was soaking it up and I wasn’t getting dark enough stain .
I want to stain my fence but it's already greyed out. I want to stain it with a yellow or redish color like yours to make it look like new again. Is that possible on greyed out wood? would you still recommend a semi transparent stain? I appreciate any help!
You can still stain it but you should clean/ pressure wash it first. They sell wood prep products that you can use without pressure washing. Pressure washing is a good way to go also but you need to be careful not to use too much pressure. The gray color is only on the surface.
@@giobucks6498 If it's gray then it should be cleaned or pressure washed. It should look like new wood before staining. This stain is water based and can be applied not long after washing. It should be applied to clean wood though.
I forget but it was more than I thought it would take. The wood soaked it up. Probably around double what the calculation on the can says it should take.
The pickets are Cedar, and the rails / posts are pressure treated pine. Both came out looking similar. I would think of this as more of a semitransparent paint. It looks like a beautiful stain though.
Looks great. Actually it looks beautiful. I’m sold on your design .
Great looking craftsmanship. Stain looks perfect 👍👍
I can't believe you brushed the whole fence. I bought a cheap bug sprayer and went to town. It went very fast and turned out great. I probably used an extra gallon and a half maybe 2 gallons but it was so worth it for the time I spent on it I was done and maybe 2 hours from start to finish the cleanup. Then I just let the cheap bug sprayer dry up before I disposed of it. My neighbor was an old commercial painter and he told me about that so with his knowledge I wasn't going to question him I just tried it and it was the best thing I could have done. But my hat's off to you and all the brush strokes that you had applied to that fence man that looked like a lot of work
Hey, sorry to bother you 3 months after your post. Did your sprayer tip get clogged as you were spraying?
Did you use oil or waterbase stain?
Thank you so much for this video, very informative. I may have missed it in the video, if I did I apologize. Can u tell me the color you went with, I know the brand is Valspar
Semi-Transparent Cedar Naturaltone
Thanks, man. Definitely helped and this is how I’ll do my new fence
Nice work brother! Thanks for teaching
Looks like you did a great job but my recommendation would be to hold the can so you don't have to do such a back workout
Looks great
Looks great! After 8 years, do you simply pressure wash and reapply, or is sanding involved? Thx
I would pressure wash and it says to prepare previously stained surfaces with Valspar wood cleaner or Valspar all in one wood prep. You shouldn’t need to sand unless there a certain spots you want to.
@@JoeMcCoskey thanks, again, looks great
Beautiful! What color stain is that it's beautiful
It’s Valspar semi-transparent cedar natural tone
I'm looking same color.
How many coats did you apply with the brush? Because I feel the same way like I had to go over it a couple times because the wood was soaking it up and I wasn’t getting dark enough stain .
I just kept applying it until it finished soaking in. It might have been good to do a light coat that might seal it and then apply a second coat.
What color is this? Love it
It's Cedar Naturaltone Semi-Transparent from Valspar.
I want to stain my fence but it's already greyed out. I want to stain it with a yellow or redish color like yours to make it look like new again. Is that possible on greyed out wood? would you still recommend a semi transparent stain? I appreciate any help!
You can still stain it but you should clean/ pressure wash it first. They sell wood prep products that you can use without pressure washing. Pressure washing is a good way to go also but you need to be careful not to use too much pressure. The gray color is only on the surface.
@@JoeMcCoskey should I pressure wash it again if I took too long to stain it?
@@giobucks6498 If it's gray then it should be cleaned or pressure washed. It should look like new wood before staining. This stain is water based and can be applied not long after washing. It should be applied to clean wood though.
How many gallons did it take?
I forget but it was more than I thought it would take. The wood soaked it up. Probably around double what the calculation on the can says it should take.
What’s kind is that stain called like what’s the name of it
It's a Semi-Transparent water based stain from Valspar. The color is Cedar Naturaltone.
what type of wood is this stained on? cedar?
The pickets are Cedar, and the rails / posts are pressure treated pine. Both came out looking similar. I would think of this as more of a semitransparent paint. It looks like a beautiful stain though.
wow!
Hold the bucket next time bro