(02-16-2018, 09:29 AM)crokett™ Wrote: Do you apply the dye after the final turning/sanding? How deep does the dye penetrate?
After I found the dye soaking into the grain of the wood unevenly, causing most segments to be nearly black on one side, I applied a coat of Deft lacquer sanding sealer to bare wood after sanding. I flooded the sealer on and quickly wiped it off again because I wanted the most sealer where it soaked in the fastest. When it dried, I exposed the surface wood fibers with 00 steel wool. The dye then went on mush more evenly.
To remove the dye that soaked in too much, I tried sanding but that felt like it was going to take forever. For curiosity, I scratched the bad surface with a pocket knife to get an idea how far I had to go, which caused me to give up sanding. I ended up using a light sheer scrape with a bowl gouge to take off the wood, then started over on sanding up to 400 grit.
Sanding sealer, steel wool, dye, steel wool, lacquer, steel wool, lacquer, steel wool, lacquer, steel wool, Yorkshire Grit, polish with a clean tee shirt, picture.
I'm beginning to see why this procedure isn't all that popular.
We do segmented turning, not because it is easy, but because it is hard.