The doors in my 1930s house have been through some misadventures recently so I'm looking for some advice on how to rescue them.
I got them dipped with the intention of having a clean base to repaint them, but once I saw the natural wood, I fell in love and am now determined not to paint them. I'd like to go a bit Arts & Crafts with the house, and wanted to keep it simple so I bought boiled linseed oil. Problem:
1. The lounge door has had the handles and hinges moved to the other side, and the gaps filled with WHITE filler. I was told I could stain the filler to match the wood. I bought some water based stain, but despite dozens of coats, the colour has barely changed and the filler doesn't seem to absorb the stain. The surrounding wood soaks up all the stain and gets even darker, leaving a right mess.
2. They came back from dipping with VERY raised grain, some patches furrier than a shag carpet. Despite heavy sanding, the furry patches still had deep grooves, so I bought some coloured filler which can supposedly be stained, filled all the dinks and cracks, and sanded again. I realised OK I'll have to stain the whole lot to get the filler to blend in. Again, the stain makes the wood much darker but not the filler, so it stands out even more! I've attached a photo of a test patch showing a filled patch in the middle, with a strip of linseed oil on the bottom half and a strip of wood stain on the top; in both cases the wood got much darker but the filler stayed light and looks worse than with no treatment at all.
So what can I do to rescue the situation? I realise the coloured filler was a mistake and I should have just left all the cracks & holes. Would a different stain (darker? oil based?) work better on the filler?
I got them dipped with the intention of having a clean base to repaint them, but once I saw the natural wood, I fell in love and am now determined not to paint them. I'd like to go a bit Arts & Crafts with the house, and wanted to keep it simple so I bought boiled linseed oil. Problem:
1. The lounge door has had the handles and hinges moved to the other side, and the gaps filled with WHITE filler. I was told I could stain the filler to match the wood. I bought some water based stain, but despite dozens of coats, the colour has barely changed and the filler doesn't seem to absorb the stain. The surrounding wood soaks up all the stain and gets even darker, leaving a right mess.
2. They came back from dipping with VERY raised grain, some patches furrier than a shag carpet. Despite heavy sanding, the furry patches still had deep grooves, so I bought some coloured filler which can supposedly be stained, filled all the dinks and cracks, and sanded again. I realised OK I'll have to stain the whole lot to get the filler to blend in. Again, the stain makes the wood much darker but not the filler, so it stands out even more! I've attached a photo of a test patch showing a filled patch in the middle, with a strip of linseed oil on the bottom half and a strip of wood stain on the top; in both cases the wood got much darker but the filler stayed light and looks worse than with no treatment at all.
So what can I do to rescue the situation? I realise the coloured filler was a mistake and I should have just left all the cracks & holes. Would a different stain (darker? oil based?) work better on the filler?