Bill Epstein Messages: 1088 Registered: May 2009 Location: Smoky Mts. USA
Illuminati (2nd Degree)
You may recall the disaster I had gluing up the veneer
there were cracks that exposed the backing.
I never had to go beyond fixing a sand-thru with a magic marker before so I Googled and Martinelli'd some advice.
Went to Michaels and bought Artists Colors: Van Dyke Brown, Raw Sienna, Burnt Umber and a Fine and Way Finer brush, Taklon Brand.
Linseed oil is the medium for these colors; ya dip the brush in it (I used the same Watco that's the cabinet finish) swirl it around in the paint on a small sheet of glass until you get a consistency and tone you like and paint it on. I found that more Linseed oil got the paint to adhere better than less. Advice I got said to apply the darkest tone first which is why you see what you do on the most damaged part. I'll come back and overpaint with some lighter tones after the dark dries.
What you don't see in this next pic are a lot of narrow longitudinal cracks that went away (well, almost, my living room is darker than the camera flash ) immediately upon application of the paint.
I was really hesitant about trying this but now I feel like a regular Vincent Van Schwartz!!
Wayne Parham Messages: 18786 Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)
I've had guys here in Tulsa repair damaged veneer with paint like that, duplicating the fibers to some degree. But I don't think they were as attentive as you were. Seeing what you've done therereally impresses me. It looks to me like with the right attention to detail, you can make a repair that's truly undetectable. Good job, Bill!