I recently played a friends guitar that had a really nice feeling satin brown (transparent) finish, I was wondering if leather dye is satin, semi-satin, or gloss
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I recently played a friends guitar that had a really nice feeling satin brown (transparent) finish, I was wondering if leather dye is satin, semi-satin, or gloss
It is a dye, not a finish.
it will just colour the timber not build up a coat.
So that means it will be as smooth as I make it?
As smooth as the timber it is colouring.
Great, thanks!
Or as smooth as whatever is on top of the dye. If you are thinking of trying leather dyes l think Id want to do serious testing on scrap timber first to ensure whatever you put on top is compatible.
Will the leather dye also work on necks?
As long as the leather dyes are water or alcohol based, there's no compatibility issues that I'm aware of. (providing they are thoroughly dry before applying the top coat) The Angelus Leather Dye I have used is alcohol based and I've had no problem with Tru Oil, Polyurethane or Acrylic Lacquer.Quote:
If you are thinking of trying leather dyes l think Id want to do serious testing on scrap timber first to ensure whatever you put on top is compatible.
As long as the neck is made of wood, yes! :pQuote:
Will the leather dye also work on necks?
However, the type of timber can effect how well a dye (or stain) works. For example mahogany takes dye/stain differently than maple because it's a much more open pore timber, but Maple can absolutely be dyed. It just doesn't suck it up as much as hog and can be more susceptible to blotching.
Do I have to have a top coat if I use this stuff on mahogany?
https://www.shoeproductsaustralia.co...er-dye/ANGLDYE