Bhend18 said:
neilc said:
The only thing to be mindful of with maple, cherry, birch etc when you are going with a dark stain is blotching.
You may want to use some kind of a blotch control. Scott sounds like he's willing to provide advice, but that has always been my biggest issue with using those woods with dark stain - not unlike what you see with trying to stain pine.
There is a finishing website that I have used -
Charles Neil Woodworking - that covers this in a fair amount of detail. I purchased his DVD's and have used his blotch control product.
You can use some of the dies via spray application. It just takes practice and patience from my experience. Lean on Scott!
Neil
I have had blotching issues on maple. I've used Minwax conditioner with some success but I'm open to trying others. I don't use Minwax stains anymore because I have found better products.
I usually have better luck with staining cherry dark than birch or maple.
One thing to keep in mind is that these are fairly advanced finishes, from a straight up painting and finishing standpoint. Not the easiest stuff, especially on your first run, and I never forget my firsts with any finish system.
Its an area that is sorely lacking, and becoming more and more apparent that people need help with these things. I have seen most of what is online about finishing, and it makes me queesy to see people speaking from positions of expertise in other fields, doing "how to" videos on finishing that are (to a professional finisher) either dreadfully outdated or just plain wrong. There is so much misinformation going out this way, and finishing is one of the more confusing disciplines to begin with. So, I am always happy to help.
The thing people don't understand about finishing is that there is no "one size fits all". People ask me all the time: "what psi should I be running my hvlp at?" Or "what Ford cup viscosity for stain?"
If I could make one thing clear to the world about finishing, it would be that it is different every time. Driven by substrate, which leads to product, which leads to process. And process alone changes every single time (even if the first to are the same twice in a row) by climate conditions alone. There is alot that goes into getting it just right, and especially in just one run through the process. Any backwards motion, like going back to sand a section and redo it, changes everything that will happen there after.
But, back to this situation, if you go cherry (which I would), the way around blotchiness with cherry is to sand to the proper grit prior to stain application. That will depend on the specific pieces of cherry you select to work with, and their grain patterns. This is where most people blow finish right out of the gate.
Evidently, there are videos (and I have seen some myself just lately) where that concept is a complete and utter boondoggle.
Yes, absolutely, get some cherry, get milling, post up the stock, save your drops, and we can hit a homerun. Stained cherry with clear is one of favorite finishes. I think I have posted about 100 times now that bar I did that time. [big grin]