Golders
23rd February 2019, 08:44 PM
Hi all,
I'm a vintage hifi nut. I'm, restoring some big 1970's JBL studio monitor speakers. So i need to reveneer and ideally try to get the American walnut to look like they did it back then. Fortunately I have another pair that were original from the JBL factory to match it to.
So I've sourced some nice American Walnut and have discovered it looks a lot more grey/brown and darker than what I'm trying to achieve. Seems back in the day they perhaps they air dried the walnut instead of the kiln drying that is done this days which drives the colour out a bit so I understand? Also JBL probably did add a bit of stain back in the day though I can't confirm this nor find out what they used, and finally the other speakers I'm trying to match are close to 40 years old and I'm told walnut actually gets lighter over time. Anyway regardles I wanna make it a bit more orange/red. Just looking for advice on how to do this.
The attached image shows the comparison of the unstained veneer sample against the speaker finish I'm trying to replicate. Also attached an image of the big studio monitors themselves, they are form '73 and are 1200mm long and each weight 120Kg!
Any advice on how to do this is appreciated. At this stage I am considering an orange stain ,ixed with alcohol as a first step, let that dry and then oil it with danish oil. Please let me know if this is a good plan or not. Also any ideas on where to source the appropriate stain in Sydney is appreciated.
I'm a vintage hifi nut. I'm, restoring some big 1970's JBL studio monitor speakers. So i need to reveneer and ideally try to get the American walnut to look like they did it back then. Fortunately I have another pair that were original from the JBL factory to match it to.
So I've sourced some nice American Walnut and have discovered it looks a lot more grey/brown and darker than what I'm trying to achieve. Seems back in the day they perhaps they air dried the walnut instead of the kiln drying that is done this days which drives the colour out a bit so I understand? Also JBL probably did add a bit of stain back in the day though I can't confirm this nor find out what they used, and finally the other speakers I'm trying to match are close to 40 years old and I'm told walnut actually gets lighter over time. Anyway regardles I wanna make it a bit more orange/red. Just looking for advice on how to do this.
The attached image shows the comparison of the unstained veneer sample against the speaker finish I'm trying to replicate. Also attached an image of the big studio monitors themselves, they are form '73 and are 1200mm long and each weight 120Kg!
Any advice on how to do this is appreciated. At this stage I am considering an orange stain ,ixed with alcohol as a first step, let that dry and then oil it with danish oil. Please let me know if this is a good plan or not. Also any ideas on where to source the appropriate stain in Sydney is appreciated.