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Aging New Wood?

3.2K views 8 replies 8 participants last post by  Cherryville Chuck  
#1 ·
Anyone have success with aging new wood (cedar) to look old/weathered?

Going to try the black tea followed by rusty vinegar solution method here:

Forcibly Aging Wood

Don't know how it reacts with spray ink letters, or poly top coat, but will test first.

Or any other suggestions?



Thx in advance,
Ron
 
#2 ·
lime wash and baking are other methods...
distressing the wood will add a lot of character...

Wiki has some good tips... 4 Ways to Age Wood - wikiHow
 
#3 ·
Ron..........I've only tried it on the fresh cut ends of some barn wood that I made a picture frame from that was old red oak. For that application, I found that tea or coffee gave the wood too much of a golden hue, so I went back to just steel wool and vinegar. It worked pretty well.

Be sure to remember that the vinegar mixture gets really strong FAST. I found that any that had been mixed for a week or more produced more of a gray painted effect than of aging. So from now on, I'm going to make a small batch a day or two before I'm going to use it. Then make a new batch when the need arises. Also, remove the steel wool after a day or so to slow down the darkening process. Jim
 
#5 ·
Ron, let us know how it works out with the spray ink and clear coat. I have a couple of projects I want to do that I was thinking about doing just that. Pictures would be even better. 0:)
 
#7 · (Edited)
update...

Sign is going on an old platform scale barn discovered on property and restored (used for weighing livestock/produce)....google research shows the history of Gen. Jones, civil war general who established his scale works back in 1866...

Thought the barn was worthy of some signage (my first attempt), and wanted to age the background to go with the barn siding/vintage look, etc. (btw, that font is a PITA to route with all the serifs).

The stain test piece was done by using black tea followed by vinegar/rusty nail mix aged for one day. You can see the results beside a scrap piece of barn wood in the second pic. Pretty pleased with the result.

Still want to test it over a spray ink on cedar scrap and poly or spar varnish over it...will post the final result, but I expect it will be fine.

Critique on the sign is welcome, still learning!

Ron
 

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#8 ·
1st post here.

I age my wood by spraying it with spray on oven cleaner (aka lye soap). I use the Carbon brand from Wally world that comes in a plastic spray bottle but any brand should work. Spray it on the wood then after a certain amount of time rub white vinegar on it to neutralized it. The time will need to be determined by doing a test piece. Be sure and do a test piece as leaving it on to long will turn it black. Test time can range from 3 - 30 minutes depending on how dark you want it and the type of wood being used. This is the best way I've found to give it a truly 100 year old weathered look in less then 10 mins. Basically it causes the woods natural tannins to react and age similar to the way it would if it was being exposed to nature, just at a much faster pace. Once neutralized and dried it should be safe to paint, stain, finish, ext... Good luck!

Jon
 
#9 ·
Welcome to the forum Jon. That`s similar in principle to the way oak was aged about 100 years ago. They used ammonia fumes to react with the tannins. Ammonia is also alkaline like lye.