Lizziecro
9th August 2013, 09:53 PM
Hi Everyone,
Just hoping there is a wise person here who can help me salvage my situation with the dining table. So here's the story:
Our recycled oregon dining table was a 'golden oak' colour, which, after 10 years, I tired of. It was bearable, but I wanted to lighten it up, take some of the reddish-gold colour out, and get a more neutral colour. (Didn't suit the current house).
So I stripped off the varnish, but found (as expected) it was that usual orangey colour oregon has. Decided to bleach it - OH MY GOODNESS!!!! It stripped all the colour out of some of the wood leaving it very light, but the grain was left the same colour as before so looked significantly worse. Decided if I applied some liming stain that might lighten the grain. Noooo. That didn't happen either.
Decided if I can't get the table to a more neutral, lighter colour, then I'll go to a more neutral darker colour. Sanded the whole thing back to the naked oregon colour, then I applied some 'Feast and Watson 'walnut' stain to take it to a dark brown. Noooo, that didn't happen either! It actually just returned to almost the exact colour I started with before I touched the thing on day 1!! (I started thinking maybe the table was trying to tell me something... but then again, I had started to get fed up, too!). So I thought if I put on a few more coats of the walnut...... nooooo. Didn't happen.
Now I have a table which is redder, with darker grain, than I originally had. Not happy Jan. Now it really won't suit the house!
Is there a limit to how much stain the table will take?
Would applying an even darker stain on top of the 4 coats of walnut be worth trying?
Should I bleach the whole damn thing and start again?
Is there an easier way (other than just buying another table) to get either a light neutral colour or a dark neutral colour?
I want to finish it with Danish oil. I'd be very grateful for any advice. Thank you. :)
Just hoping there is a wise person here who can help me salvage my situation with the dining table. So here's the story:
Our recycled oregon dining table was a 'golden oak' colour, which, after 10 years, I tired of. It was bearable, but I wanted to lighten it up, take some of the reddish-gold colour out, and get a more neutral colour. (Didn't suit the current house).
So I stripped off the varnish, but found (as expected) it was that usual orangey colour oregon has. Decided to bleach it - OH MY GOODNESS!!!! It stripped all the colour out of some of the wood leaving it very light, but the grain was left the same colour as before so looked significantly worse. Decided if I applied some liming stain that might lighten the grain. Noooo. That didn't happen either.
Decided if I can't get the table to a more neutral, lighter colour, then I'll go to a more neutral darker colour. Sanded the whole thing back to the naked oregon colour, then I applied some 'Feast and Watson 'walnut' stain to take it to a dark brown. Noooo, that didn't happen either! It actually just returned to almost the exact colour I started with before I touched the thing on day 1!! (I started thinking maybe the table was trying to tell me something... but then again, I had started to get fed up, too!). So I thought if I put on a few more coats of the walnut...... nooooo. Didn't happen.
Now I have a table which is redder, with darker grain, than I originally had. Not happy Jan. Now it really won't suit the house!
Is there a limit to how much stain the table will take?
Would applying an even darker stain on top of the 4 coats of walnut be worth trying?
Should I bleach the whole damn thing and start again?
Is there an easier way (other than just buying another table) to get either a light neutral colour or a dark neutral colour?
I want to finish it with Danish oil. I'd be very grateful for any advice. Thank you. :)