Should've would've could've done
Nov. 21st, 2006 10:02 pmShould've jogged this evening. Instead, I applied the first coat of stain to the oak vent registers I'll be installing in the kitchen and living room. An oak stain for the white oak kitchen registers, and maple stain for the red oak living room pieces.
Amazing, the difference that one coat of stain can make. There's nothing like good wood.
Amazing, the difference that one coat of stain can make. There's nothing like good wood.
OOooooOOOOooo
Date: 2006-11-22 05:12 am (UTC)Re: OOooooOOOOooo
Date: 2006-11-22 02:12 pm (UTC)I also bought registers and returns for the bedrooms. Of course, being an older, jury-rigged house, some vents aren't exact measurements, which means that I will need to shave baseboards. I bought a Japanese woodworking saw (like this one, but I'm not sure of the exact model) which will allow me to cut the baseboard while it's still on the wall. The person who rec'd it said that Japanese saws cut on the pull, which allows for more control.
I'm getting way too into this. But damn, that wood looks lovely.
no subject
Date: 2006-11-22 05:07 pm (UTC)Re: OOooooOOOOooo
Date: 2006-11-22 05:09 pm (UTC)Re: OOooooOOOOooo
Date: 2006-11-22 05:13 pm (UTC)One good thing about all this is that I'll be working on baseboard edges. I should be able to ease them away from the wall an inch or two prior to cutting. It's going to be a pain, but the stained oak registers and returns are going to look so much nicer than the pinky-brown metal things they're replacing. The only advantage the pinky-brown metal had is that it could be bent to fit to some extent. A quarter inch difference in length? No biggie. With wood, it makes a difference.
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Date: 2006-11-22 05:24 pm (UTC)My house is older--late 60s/early 70s--and all the kitchen cabinets are real wood. Even the shelves are 3/4" thick board, as opposed to the particle board shelving I've seen in homes much more expensive than mine. The doors are Shaker-plain, no design whatsoever. But, real wood.
Whoever installed them stained them green. I blame the 70s.
It's not a horrible green. Kind of a piney shade, which you can still find in stores. But still, green. My ultimate goal, at some point when I have nothing else on my plate, is to strip away the green and apply a nice oak or maple stain.
I will admit that there is the same sort of all-wood cabinet in the bathroom. The owners stained that one yellow. My folks did paint over it, a nice cream shade. My Dad didn't have the patience for refinishing.
Some companies offer a huge number of non-natural stain colors, but I confess an aversion. What did the wood ever do to you, that you should stain it rose pink?
Re: OOooooOOOOooo
Date: 2006-11-22 06:42 pm (UTC)The bathroom may need work, however? Or just no exposed wood?
Saw looks cool. Until the hands stop hurting, though, I'll just admire yours! (That website looks like Restoration Hardware for DIYers.)
no subject
Date: 2006-11-22 09:09 pm (UTC)The idiot crew who painted my Floral Park home applied stain like paint to all the wood cabinets. Oh, yes! They came back and had to sand the ash back to almost the starting point. And did it only marginally well in a couple of places.
There are advantages to doing it yourself...