Yellow oak
- John Ranes II, CPF, GCF
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Re: Yellow oak
Really not being a SmartA** but I believe that it would involve using YellowOak.
Oak was huge here in the 1980's and it took until just recently for it to slowly die... but as I recall, wood workers and moulding producers would source out Red Oak, White Oak and Yellow Oak as timber. Obviously the stain in finishing also skews the results and appearance, but the wood itself contributes to the final look.
I'll have to Google "Oak Varieties" next to see what can be found.
John
Oak was huge here in the 1980's and it took until just recently for it to slowly die... but as I recall, wood workers and moulding producers would source out Red Oak, White Oak and Yellow Oak as timber. Obviously the stain in finishing also skews the results and appearance, but the wood itself contributes to the final look.
I'll have to Google "Oak Varieties" next to see what can be found.
John
John Ranes II, CPF, GCF
The Frame Workshop of Appleton, Inc.
430 E Northland Ave
Appleton, WI 54911-2127 USA
Member: FATG & PPFA
The Frame Workshop
John Ranes Picture Framer Blog
The Frame Workshop of Appleton, Inc.
430 E Northland Ave
Appleton, WI 54911-2127 USA
Member: FATG & PPFA
The Frame Workshop
John Ranes Picture Framer Blog
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Re: Yellow oak
Someone at the weekend was talking about chinese oak and how yellow it is compared to british oak, this was in relation to cheap imported chinese oak furniture.
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Re: Yellow oak
You can buy a "golden oak" waterstain which will tint the oak a bit. Mix a little yellow ochre, burnt sienna and raw umber into the mix to give the colour some solidity and finish with a coat of shellac and wax.
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Re: Yellow oak
Most of the oak I buy from arqadia and Simons tends to quite dark and probably wouldn't stain yellow, however I think Mainline does an unfinished veneer which is quite pale and would take a stain.
Re: Yellow oak
Larson Juhl Confetti - yellow - and then do a bit of nifty hand finishing to give a grain effect - bit of reverse thinking there for you.
Re: Yellow oak
Depends what you mean by yellow.
To achieve a nice polished finish you would need to use a stain. When you stain things you not only tint them but make them darker.
If the wood is quite dark already you are likely to end up with orangey-brown.
Antique Pine stain is quite yellow and would look very yellow on a pale wood. How it would look on oak depends on the colour of the oak
which as previously mentioned can vary a lot. Some has quite a pinky look which combined with a yellowish stain would lean toward brown.
To achieve a nice polished finish you would need to use a stain. When you stain things you not only tint them but make them darker.
If the wood is quite dark already you are likely to end up with orangey-brown.
Antique Pine stain is quite yellow and would look very yellow on a pale wood. How it would look on oak depends on the colour of the oak
which as previously mentioned can vary a lot. Some has quite a pinky look which combined with a yellowish stain would lean toward brown.
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Re: Yellow oak
Yes. I guess that was really my question: where can I buy light enough oak? I have a picture framed in a nice pale/yellow oak finish... except it's nasty polcore, and I want to replace it with the real stuff.Graysalchemy wrote:Most of the oak I buy from arqadia and Simons tends to quite dark and probably wouldn't stain yellow
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Re: Yellow oak
Phone rose and Hollis tell them what you want and I'm sure they'll pick you the light length out or keep an eye out until they get a light one.
Re: Yellow oak
I would look the mainline veneers then they are quite pale and unfinished, they also have the advantage that you can cut them easily on the morso and they pin well.