View Single Post
  #3   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
[email protected] Peter@yahoo.net is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1
Default Pre-stained wood

On Wed, 18 Feb 2009 09:40:45 -0500, "Edwin Pawlowski" wrote:


wrote in message
news
Is it possible to get pre-stained wood ??

I have two room dividers, each about 4 foot long and 3' foot high that
would
look better with a 6" top. Rather than trying to stain my own and hope
to
get the right finish, it would be easier to get pre-stained. Anyone
know
where to get it ??

I would really be nice to match all the stair rails, bannisters and
similar
wood trim in the house using the same stained woods... Any thoughts here
??

Thanks in advance for your suggestions !!

Peter


I've never seen such a thing and doubt it exists. There are hundreds of
stains available so matching can be a problem if you don't know what is on
the wood now. You'd have to have the stain for touchup anyway since it is
only a surface treatment, the raw wood will show where it is cut.



Thanks..... what options are available ?? Here's what I have

House stairway with a 8' stair bannister, a 3' stair rail with spindles, leading to
a hallway with two 4' dividers that I'd like to top off with a 6" top, trimmed with
moulding and finished with casing or crown where the top meets the dividers.

So we're looking at refinishing a

8' Bannister rail (two and one half inch)
3' of Stair rail top moulding
2 - 4' x 6" pieces for topping the dividers
assorted casing or crown moulding for the divider tops.

Not a large amount of surface.

The bannister can be stripped. Lumber for the divider top can be either pine or
hardwood (not purchased yet). The finish casing/crown would be pine. The stair rail is
already finished and would be a pain to disassemble and strip.

So different woods, some finished some plain.... I seriously doubt that
I am capable of obtaining like finishes using stain.

Are there paints, or finishes, or other methods that would give a stained 'woodwork'
appearance without looking like someone went wild with a brush. Would 'spray
work better than 'brush' ???

I'm not interested in bringing out 'grain' or wood beauty or pine 'knots' but want
to achieve a 'uniform earth tone' on the wood without making it obvious that it's
painted.

Am I overlooking something very obvious ??

Thx....

Peter