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[email protected] May 19th 10 05:43 AM

Staining error
 
Number One Son is a good kid with a bad problem. He's renovating a
bathroom and building a new closet, for which he purchased a prehung
pine six panel door from the Borg. He has stained the door, one coat,
with Minwax red oak and is dissatisfied with the color. Too dark.
Short of ripping out the door and starting over, any suggestions?
Minwax makes a "stain remover" ... anybody have any luck with that product?

TIA

Larry

[email protected] May 19th 10 08:20 AM

Staining error
 
I have never had any luck at all removing stain. Toning it, glazing
it, aging it, sure. Removing it... nope.

It sounds like the attempt with the Minwax product could be as good a
try as anything. Before I tried it, I would call the tech help line
of the stain manufacturer and ask for any suggestions.

I hadn't actually heard of a wood stain remover and was unable to find
a product like that on the net. In looking around, there were lots of
products to remove stains on wood like oxalic acid, or other light
acids with surfactants and detergents.

Are you sure you found a product that says it will remove applied wood
stain from wood?

I also noticed that you said the wood in question was pine. And to
compound things, being a six panel door, there will be stain in every
crevice, crack, joint, etc., and if the stain was applied to bare
wood, I don't think you will have much luck removing it.

Robert

Maxwell Lol May 19th 10 12:22 PM

Staining error
 
" writes:

Number One Son is a good kid with a bad problem. He's renovating a
bathroom and building a new closet, for which he purchased a prehung
pine six panel door from the Borg. He has stained the door, one coat,
with Minwax red oak and is dissatisfied with the color. Too
dark. Short of ripping out the door and starting over, any
suggestions? Minwax makes a "stain remover" ... anybody have any luck
with that product?


You can sand the wood. This will lighten the color (by removing wood
and stain). However, you can only do this for large flat areas. Cracks
are a pain in the crack.

Larry Jaques[_2_] May 19th 10 02:33 PM

Staining error
 
On Tue, 18 May 2010 23:43:19 -0500, "
wrote the following:

Number One Son is a good kid with a bad problem. He's renovating a
bathroom and building a new closet, for which he purchased a prehung
pine six panel door from the Borg. He has stained the door, one coat,
with Minwax red oak and is dissatisfied with the color. Too dark.
Short of ripping out the door and starting over, any suggestions?
Minwax makes a "stain remover" ... anybody have any luck with that product?


Best thing I've ever seen over Minwhacked RBS is...white enamel.

--
The great thing about getting older is that
you don't lose all the other ages you've been.
-- Madeleine L'Engle

Larry Jaques[_2_] May 19th 10 02:42 PM

Staining error
 
On Wed, 19 May 2010 00:20:03 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote the following:

I have never had any luck at all removing stain. Toning it, glazing
it, aging it, sure. Removing it... nope.


I think he just wants to lighten it, but we all know what lightened
stain looks like. That's right, RBS Lite!


It sounds like the attempt with the Minwax product could be as good a
try as anything. Before I tried it, I would call the tech help line
of the stain manufacturer and ask for any suggestions.

I hadn't actually heard of a wood stain remover and was unable to find
a product like that on the net. In looking around, there were lots of
products to remove stains on wood like oxalic acid, or other light
acids with surfactants and detergents.


I got rid of a lot of the RBS on Mom's old dining set (oak ply which
had been limed at one time and later covered with a deep, dark stain.
Working in a very well ventilated garage, with the door open, I
scrubbed every inch with lacquer thinner, wiping as I went, letting
the excess flow down to the area I'd clean next. It took hours, but I
got about 75% of the pigment out of the pores and 90% off the surface
of the wood. She was thrilled with the result while I gagged, but it
was her table, eh? I wasn't fond of the still-too-dramatic face/pore
contrast.


Are you sure you found a product that says it will remove applied wood
stain from wood?


Knowing Minwhacked, it's likely an oxalic acid mix sportin' a 4x price
tag.


I also noticed that you said the wood in question was pine. And to
compound things, being a six panel door, there will be stain in every
crevice, crack, joint, etc., and if the stain was applied to bare
wood, I don't think you will have much luck removing it.


Given that he thought it was too dark, he may be in luck...if he likes
contrast.

--
The great thing about getting older is that
you don't lose all the other ages you've been.
-- Madeleine L'Engle

HeyBub[_3_] May 19th 10 02:43 PM

Staining error
 
wrote:
Number One Son is a good kid with a bad problem. He's renovating a
bathroom and building a new closet, for which he purchased a prehung
pine six panel door from the Borg. He has stained the door, one coat,
with Minwax red oak and is dissatisfied with the color. Too dark.
Short of ripping out the door and starting over, any suggestions?
Minwax makes a "stain remover" ... anybody have any luck with that
product?


Minwax makes a "Gel" stain which will probably cover the mistake. I've used
it to cover fiberglass, metal, painted wood, and everything but the cat. Not
a perfect solution, but it might prove adequate.



Theodore Edward Stosterone May 21st 10 03:10 AM

Staining error
 
Minwax makes a "stain remover" ... anybody have any luck with that product?

I'd e-mail Monica Lewinsky. She'd know....


Larry The Snake Guy May 26th 10 05:54 AM

Staining error
 
Take the door off and leave it on the roof for a week?


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