Adding Color to Lacquer - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://www.forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: Adding Color to Lacquer (/showthread.php?tid=7362186) |
Adding Color to Lacquer - Jack01 - 04-11-2021 Adding Color to Lacquer I heard you can add aniline Dye to Lacquer and get a desire color. Is that true ? Thanks RE: Adding Color to Lacquer - jteneyck - 04-12-2021 (04-11-2021, 05:09 PM)Jack01 Wrote: Adding Color to Lacquer No such thing as aniline dye these days but, yes, you can add dye to lacquer as long as the solvents are compatible. This is commonly done to create toners which are used on cheap furniture, but it can also be used on higher end work that has first been dyed and/or stained, to add depth and adjust the color if necessary. It's a very useful tool to have in your finishing arsenal. I use Transtint dye in shellac and water based topcoats quite often. John RE: Adding Color to Lacquer - Jack01 - 04-14-2021 (04-12-2021, 03:04 PM)jteneyck Wrote: No such thing as aniline dye these days but, yes, you can add dye to lacquer as long as the solvents are compatible. This is commonly done to create toners which are used on cheap furniture, but it can also be used on higher end work that has first been dyed and/or stained, to add depth and adjust the color if necessary. It's a very useful tool to have in your finishing arsenal. I use Transtint dye in shellac and water based topcoats quite often. John Thanks for your help RE: Adding Color to Lacquer - Rob Young - 04-14-2021 (04-12-2021, 03:04 PM)jteneyck Wrote: No such thing as aniline dye these days but, yes, you can add dye to lacquer as long as the solvents are compatible. This is commonly done to create toners which are used on cheap furniture, but it can also be used on higher end work that has first been dyed and/or stained, to add depth and adjust the color if necessary. It's a very useful tool to have in your finishing arsenal. I use Transtint dye in shellac and water based topcoats quite often. re: no such thing as aniline dye The substance "analine" phased out of dyes for safety reasons but as a generic marketing & descriptive term it persists. We will probably be stuck with it as a marketing term for acid dyes for a very long time. Aniline as a chemical and industrial building block isn't going way. Semiconductor industry uses it. Pharmaceuticals too. Probably a bunch of other things. |