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I wouldn't do it. I tried it a few months ago on a laminated teak display
easel I was building for a friend down in the BVI. Stained with an aniline dye which is the most transparent of all stain types to subdue the variation in the veneers and it still came out with a muddy look under the varnish. Stripped it down to bare wood and started over. BTW, if anyone gets to Tortola and want to repay the first mate for putting up with your boating addiction, be sure to take her to the Brandywine Restaurant. Finest dining experience in the Caribbean. I made the menu easels. :-) -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com "Wayne.B" wrote in message ... I'm getting ready to do a major varnish project on my Grand Banks 49 and was thinking that it might be nice to have the teak more or less the same color (some is lighter, some darker, etc.). The wood will be stripped and sanded before I start with the varnish. Does anyone have any thoughts, experience, whatever with staining teak? If so, what type and color of stain would you recommend? Is there any downside other than some loss of wood grain visibility? I'm planning to use epifanes gloss varnish which builds up to a dark amber color with enough coats. |
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