I'm coming to the end of a carved oak rocking horse project and still can't decide what finish to use.
The oak planks are all slightly different colours, and I'd like to colour the horse to make him come together as a single unit.
I've considered the following:
A: Briwax Dark Oak wax, but I'm worried that the grains of the planks may have different levels of "openness" and so exacerbate the differences. I'm also worried that wax might not stand up to being played with by children.
B: Wood dye and varnish, more hard wearing and the colour will go in deep, but I'm worried the dye will look patchy with the complex shapes and varying levels of end grain all over the piece. Also I like the colour of oak and want to highlight the grain, so I don't want to go too dark.
On the rockers I used Colron Medium Georgian Oak dye (the water based one) followed by yacht varnish, which actually looks good. Not too patchy, but it's darker than I'd like to go with the horse itself. Also, even after wetting and sanding, the grain raised on application of the dye and needed plenty of varnish to smooth it out.
I'll try to post a picture to let you see what I'm on about.
Am I wishing for the impossible?
What would you guys do?
The oak planks are all slightly different colours, and I'd like to colour the horse to make him come together as a single unit.
I've considered the following:
A: Briwax Dark Oak wax, but I'm worried that the grains of the planks may have different levels of "openness" and so exacerbate the differences. I'm also worried that wax might not stand up to being played with by children.
B: Wood dye and varnish, more hard wearing and the colour will go in deep, but I'm worried the dye will look patchy with the complex shapes and varying levels of end grain all over the piece. Also I like the colour of oak and want to highlight the grain, so I don't want to go too dark.
On the rockers I used Colron Medium Georgian Oak dye (the water based one) followed by yacht varnish, which actually looks good. Not too patchy, but it's darker than I'd like to go with the horse itself. Also, even after wetting and sanding, the grain raised on application of the dye and needed plenty of varnish to smooth it out.
I'll try to post a picture to let you see what I'm on about.
Am I wishing for the impossible?
What would you guys do?