MikeGE said:Looks good! Is that a Liebherr wine cabinet?
Cheese said:Good to know.. I thought it looked like a Sub but with the Miele photo I thought it may also have been a Miele product. A lot of people are into the “handle matching” thing. That’d be me. [smile]
Beautiful job as usual Tom.. just love the NY style segmented panel thing. That’s been a force of reckoning for years...hotel & condo stuff.
Question...how wide and deep are the grooves/dados between the panels and is any stain/paint applied to the recesses?
That’s exactly the look I’m trying to produce on some ambrosia maple drawer fronts.
Cheese said:Thanks for the reply Tom...like Ron I really like the wood, it looks like it’s been cerused. What a great look for a kitchen. Again...nice job.
You mentioned dark grey was used in the kerfs, would that be a paint or a stain? Did you apply it with a small brush or did you fabricate a small applicator?
TSO_Products said:Tom - your consistently outstanding work is not only a testimonial to your skill in planning and executing these outstanding projects - but you also keep demonstarting what is possible with the quality tools within financial reach of most anyone serious about doing good work without a shop full of stationary tools and CNC Routers.
Thanks for the continuing inspiration and encouragement by example!
Hans
PS: and CONGRATULATIONS to Mrs. B. on the completion of her career!
tjbnwi said:Thank you.
It is not a cerused finish, that was too white for the designer. She wanted the cream color. We use a spray toner then an slight amber tinted waterborne finish.
The gray is KA+. We taped the kerf and brushed the finish in. Sanded the tape edge, removed the tape.
Cheese said:tjbnwi said:Thank you.
It is not a cerused finish, that was too white for the designer. She wanted the cream color. We use a spray toner then an slight amber tinted waterborne finish.
The gray is KA+. We taped the kerf and brushed the finish in. Sanded the tape edge, removed the tape.
I do like the cream undertones, they are a bit softer.
OMG...I've just asked the king of KA+ finishing if he uses a stain to finish the kerfs...what was I thinking...I must have OD'd on too many mashed potatoes tonight.
Seriously...had I given it a bit more thought it'd be obvious that your solution would somehow encompass the KA product line.
So, it's all about chemistry and you need to find the technique and the chemistries that work for you. Experimentation has always been the key.