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MasterCraft maple doors

1/24/19       
Ryan

I have bought some MasterCraft maple doors from Menards (unfinished). I lightly sanded them and used a nice stain,( a custom mix from Sherwin Williams). But half the door came out blotchy. Any suggestions? My research now shows maple is known to be blotchy but I have several more doors to do. Help!! :)

1/25/19       #2: MasterCraft maple doors ...
Tyler

you can try a stain conditioner, but generally you get what you get with maple. blotchy uneven stain

1/25/19       #3: MasterCraft maple doors ...
JeffM

Maple can be tamed with the right stain. Sherwin williams wiping stain will stain it nicely. Water based stain is a PITA, but it will stain it pretty good. I've used both SW wiping stain and General Finishes water based with good results on several jobs. Cheap stains from Big box stores like minwax will not work at all. I've also never used conditioner on maple or other woods prone to blotching as most will offer...you just can't get a rich color after conditioning unless you go through multiple steps with dyes and other materials.


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1/25/19       #4: MasterCraft maple doors ...
rich c.

Can't help now unless you want to strip the doors. Even then you won't get all the color out, unless maybe you then bleach them. You can spray on some toner, but then you may loose the color you are matching. What is your customer saying?

1/25/19       #5: MasterCraft maple doors ...
Al

Take a clean rag and wet it and ring it out so it is damp not soaking wet. Rub this over entire surface and let dry. I then just take a piece of 180 or 220 sandpaper and lightly scuff sand the surface just to get the little fuzzies of. Sometimes with maple you don't even have to scuff sand. The idea is to open the pores in the wood to allow even stain penetration. I do this all the time with maple.
Try on backside of door first. Hope this helps you out.

1/28/19       #6: MasterCraft maple doors ...
Shane

Another way to keep maple door from being so blotchy is turn your wiping stain into a spray no wipe with that Sherwin stain.... Try a ratio of 1 part stain to 3 parts vm&p naptha … put in a decent cup gun and spray the stain evenly on the doors with the round pattern on your gun... adjust air pressure just low enough to push the material out atomized and fluid cut back enough that your passes/tails of the color are flashing off as your overlapping your next pass.... hit it just right and you can bring your doors up to color quite nicely with less blotching than wiping......

2/7/19       #7: MasterCraft maple doors ...
John S Member

I have had luck with mixing clear lacquer (10%) with lacquer thinner (90%) and spraying wet. Light sand with 320 and stain as usual. This finish flows into the exposed end grain which is where the splotches appear.


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