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How to apply wood stain

Alison2
Finding My Feet

How to apply wood stain

Hi all,

I was hoping for some tips on how to apply wood stain properly? I’m making a puzzle board and have applied 3 coats of Cabot’s water based interior stain then followed with one coat of Cabothane clear. Followed instructions with timing of repeat coats. After the last coat when I picked them up and some were a bit stuck down so I managed to pull off all layers of tint in patches. I just applied another coat of the tint to try to cover it up but it hasn’t covered it well and it’s at the 2 hour mark (apparently ready for another coat) but it’s still a bit sticky. 
Any tips on how to stop this happening and how to get nice even coverage? Thank you 🙏 

Alison

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Jewelleryrescue
Kind of a Big Deal

Re: How to apply wood stain

Hi @Alison2 

Happy New  Year.

I hear your call for assistance.

 

Wear stain proof gloves for starters

 

You  can use a chux or old rag fold it up into a neat square approx 8cm x 8cm  put the cloth over the stain bottle and tilt in untill the cloth be soaked by the stain.  Now  wipe the stain in progresssive swipes to  darken the light spots where the stain was pulled off.

 

The idea is to progressivly darken the wood to just in the light areas so hope full a more uniform  match  occurs.

 

Failing that sand back the timber with a sander and start the stain progress again .  Stain it exactly the  way you did the first time for the best match

 

Hope you get this in time and it works out as planned.

MitchellMc
Bunnings Team Member
Bunnings Team Member

Re: How to apply wood stain

Hi @Alison2,

 

It sounds like your project is experiencing some curing issues. I’d recommend giving the puzzle boards a full 24 hours to cure before handling them again. This will help the layers set properly and avoid peeling or sticking. Moving forward, if you're applying coats to both sides, make sure that the side you've just stained is at least partially cured before placing it down.

 

One approach is to line up all the pieces, coat one side, and let that dry before turning them over to coat the other side. You can even flip them once to coat the next side. The key is not to place a freshly coated side down for at least a few hours to avoid the layers sticking together.

 

For the areas where the stain has lifted, let it sit for an hour before adding a thin layer of stain. Wait another hour, and then apply a second thin layer if necessary. By applying the stain in small, controlled layers and giving each one time to cure, you should be able to achieve an even, smooth finish without the issues you're experiencing. 

 

Please let us know if you have further questions.

 

Mitchell

 

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