SilverHornet
New member
Or more specifically, making it look old and well-travelled - specific examples would probably help. This is the sort of effect I'm after [okay I can't link ... thumbnail three]
A few replications of this have come close but fallen over at the finishing stage, eg [still can't link - thumbnail two] - as it all shares the same colouration, highs and lows, the details are lost and it just looks tacky.
Reading elsewhere suggests this sort of effect can be achieved by dying twice - once with darker and wiping it off, then a lighter one later. My concern there is wouldn't the solvents from the second coat, either make the darker colour bleed out, or react in other ways?Any particular types or brands to use (or avoid) for this?
Ideally I think I'd probably want to oil this rather than varnish, otherwise I might just layer varnish on the darker areas... this has been done before but it looks plasticky and uneven [...and thumbnail one]. And no, I definitely do not want to paint it.
Many thanks for your experience and insights.
A few replications of this have come close but fallen over at the finishing stage, eg [still can't link - thumbnail two] - as it all shares the same colouration, highs and lows, the details are lost and it just looks tacky.
Reading elsewhere suggests this sort of effect can be achieved by dying twice - once with darker and wiping it off, then a lighter one later. My concern there is wouldn't the solvents from the second coat, either make the darker colour bleed out, or react in other ways?Any particular types or brands to use (or avoid) for this?
Ideally I think I'd probably want to oil this rather than varnish, otherwise I might just layer varnish on the darker areas... this has been done before but it looks plasticky and uneven [...and thumbnail one]. And no, I definitely do not want to paint it.
Many thanks for your experience and insights.