How To: Reverse Wood Staining A Pattern
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- Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
- Here we experiment with some reverse staining of a pattern on a cornhole set.
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if you made it down here I hope you find $5 on a store shelf
If you want a perfect smooth line, use gel stain. Not regular stain.
I’m surprised this video has so few views. I think you did a pretty dang good job with it!
Me too! It has saved me so much time
Thank u ! I was trying to figure out how to do this for a while!
I love this. This is exactly what I was looking for. Thank you. So glad I found your video so I can do a little surprise for my kids with their names on letters I cut out for them.
This kiddo is spot on! Thank you so much, it works awesome!
Try using carbon paper on your tape and tracing on top of your stencil instead of cutting it out. It works like a charm!!! This way you don't have to deal with a flimsy piece of paper that moves all over when trying to copy to the wood. Hope this helps!!!
This is great, and very similar to what I'm trying to on a project (the masking portion at least). Question: if you use gel stain, is there less of a chance that the stain will seep through?
Yes. Very much so
What kind of clear coat spray is it ? Gloss , semi gloss , satin? What brand was used
Did you find out?
I’m wondering the same!
Good job. I would double-side tape the stencil and use a spray paint to transfer the pattern. Stealing this idea. Thank you.
thank you, just what i was looking for!
can you use a roller to apply stain?
Did you apply sanding sealer first ? I did a test area with and without sanding sealer then sprayed clear coat and it was sharper lines in the sealer area
If you would have left the W tape on & took off the outer tape then stained over it, would you get the same effect?
Nice work! Does your x-acto knife style help you keep a steady hand? I have a pencil style x-acto knife but that 'W' would have looked like a mutant butterfly if I had tried it. What's the trick to get such precise cuts? Is it just practice?
It is mostly practice, but I will say this particular knife style is VERY helpful for precise control. It's called an ErgoKiwi if you're interested.
@@LevelUpYourFandom I am interested! Thanks for the info
I did something similar to this with stained concr3ete. Except I skipped the painter's tape. I used the part of the stencil you did but it was a sticker you use to letter cars I had a sign maker make for me. I used a heat gun and a roller to seal the edges where my stain was going to be in your case the clear coat. It worked great
Thanks love it!
Nice! Thanks
Any concern with adding a black outline around the reverse stain to make it pop?
nah, but you will have to either make another stencil just for the outline, or do it by hand. but just about anything you do it with should work fine. even sharpie if you do it after the clear coat is on
@@LevelUpYourFandom Thanks!
!!! Use a router to cut Cornhole hole
Can I use a box cutter?
A box cutter would work for the straight lines, but for anything else, it will be easier with a hobby knife (exacto knife)
Is it possible to stain the logo and then stain the rest another color?
I imagine you'd have to stain the whole thing the "lighter color", then clear coat what you want to remain that color and then stain the rest. That's exactly what I plan to do once my roll of vinyl shows up next week.
Daniel LeRoy sorry I used the wrong word. I didn’t realize until now haha. What I meant to say was: could you stain and clear coat like you would finish it normally and then use spray paint or regular paint on top of the stain to stencil on a logo? Let me know if that makes more sense.
@@wharryall Haha, got you. And as a matter of fact ALSO something I intend to do here pretty soon. I'll explain. I'm planing to put a very light colored stain all over the top of my work bench, then cut a Captain America shield template into some vinyl to poly the "white and blue" parts of the shield and use some red paint to tint the stain for the rings. Then, cut a star template and use blue paint for the center of the shield. So I'll be doing all three of the things we've been talking about in this thread. I am thinking I'll try a DIY RUclips video for it and I'll let you know how it goes!
Daniel LeRoy awesome thanks.
Music is too loud! It’s hard to hear you……
that brush is too small lol
Why not just leave the painters tape down when staining?
Nice to know this method works but it seems unnecessary.
Extra time and materials used to achieve what you already did by cutting your design out of the tape.
If you just use the painters tape, the stain seeps under the tape via the wood grain, so you need to use clear coat to ‘seal’ up that grain edge so the stain doesn’t seep into the design
@@LevelUpYourFandom Appreciate the info!
Good idea, and thanks for posting this video. An alternative would be to leave the tape down and use gel stain, which won't seep under like a penetrating stain will.
@@jsmartt You are absolutely correct about the gel stain. However, even with the gel stain, you do want to make sure you do not apply the gel stain with too much pressure and force it under the tape. I love the gel stain way more than just regular, thin as water, stain!!!
It took him an long time To measure down 9 inches and across 12. And a jigsaw? You better have the steadiness of a surgeon for that. Why in the world would you not use a whole soul or a router with a jig?
I use white rags to apply stain which is a less heavier application than a brush would give, do you reckon by using that method it would need clear coats?