Keep them coming. You'll find that you get more responses when there are pics in the post. We all like to see whats going on and its often easier than trying to explain.
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Will definitely keep the pics coming.
Last night as I was dozing off I found myself considering using a sharp knife to try make scratches in the filler to continue the grain pattern. I think I may have a problem...
Anyway, the new wood fillers have arrived -- will see if they're a better colour match, and try not to obsess too much about this detail :)
Its when you carve an artificial grain and then fill it with grain filler that you're really losing it...
If you're going to try mixing fillers for a colour match, don't forget to do some experiments so you can make an estimate of how much it changes colour when it dries. And maybe even more important how much it changes colour with whatever finish you are going to put on top of it.
This evening's woodfiller auditions:
Attachment 34015
They both smell truly vile. My other half just came into the room where I'd used them and asked whether I'd just used the loo and if so, what on earth I'd eaten for lunch.
At least you can now leave a container of woodfiller in the loo and blame that for the smell in future. ;)
So, after drying, both fillers are pretty much invisible, with the Osmo doing best:
Attachment 34019
(It's visible if you look very very closely.)
Early indications with the finish on are less good, though -- both are showing up but the Brummer less so. Will wait for the finish to dry before coming to a conclusion, though.
Unfortunately, how the filler takes the finish (absorbs it) is always going to be the deciding factor in the end result. (as you've discovered)
Another alternative might be trying a "furniture repair crayon". (I think Simon mentioned this earlier)
The ones to use would be the "synthetic" wax type, NOT the bees wax type. They come in a range of colours for timber matching.
I haven't used them personally but I've read numerous threads about them. As I understand it, because they are synthetic, they will take a coating (lacquer, poly etc) but because they are "wax" it doesn't soak in to the filler and change it's colour.
I will reiterate that I have not used this method, only read about and seen videos about it. Could be worth a try.
Then again, this could be the beginning of that rabbit hole I mentioned a few post back ;)
I don't know if TimberMate is available in the UK, but that's one brand that makes the synthetic crayons.
You can get Timbermate, but it's normally very expensive. But you can certainly get touch-up crayons easily n the UK from Amazon (I've got some somewhere but never used them), though I'm not sure about whether mine are beeswax or synthetic.