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Thread: Achieved a Stickley fumed finish on QSWO

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2017
    Location
    Landenberg, Pa
    Posts
    431

    Achieved a Stickley fumed finish on QSWO

    Well I managed to get a great finish on my most recent QSWO Morris chair, again following the plans Robert Lang had in PW and his own books. I think I managed to get close to a Stickley fumed finish. I built a simple tent, slid in the chair, and slid in a glass pie plate with 28% ammonia. 72h at about 50 degrees in the garage (no heat) and out popped a nicely darkened piece. It was fairly green. After 5 coats of dewaxed amber shellac (Brooklyn Tool & Craft “tiger flakes”, 1lb cut in ethanol), hand rubbed in between the last three coats with a maroon scotch pad. I think it came out great. Ready for the upholsterer to do his thing.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2017
    Location
    Clarks Summit PA
    Posts
    1,744
    Nice work William

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Deep South
    Posts
    3,970
    Nice job with the finish. I kind of wish I had tried fuming on the Morris chair I built.

    The pictures are harder to appreciate sideways.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Cincinnati, OH
    Posts
    924
    Thanks for posting. Really like the results. How many of the chairs have you made?
    Rustic? Well, no. That was not my intention!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jun 2017
    Location
    Landenberg, Pa
    Posts
    431
    Two of this plan, and one of another. This is my first fumed piece and I think I’ll do it again.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Cache Valley, Utah
    Posts
    1,723
    Looks great. I've fumed a couple or three pieces; love the way it looks.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2017
    Location
    Florida Panhandle
    Posts
    56
    That chair looks very nice.

    When I first read your post a few days ago, I needed to look up what a fumed finish was. Since learning about it, its brought up a different question for me. For a brief period I tried messing around with some leather work. I wasn't very good at it, that's why it was brief. During that time though, I learned about vinegaroon or its sometimes called vinegar black. Right now I don't recall the correct name of the acid that is made, but you make it by dissolving iron/steel in vinegar. You then apply it to the leather and it reacts with the tannins in the leather and turns the leather black. Because its a chemical reaction, the black doesn't fade or rub off like a dye or stain could. When reading about fuming, it sounds as if a similar process takes place but it also sounded a little hit or miss to me. The end result was not always completely predictable. Has anyone tried using vinegaroon on wood? The oak, having a high tannin content sounds like it would be a good candidate. At least with the leather, if it wasn't dark enough I'd just "paint" on a little more. I think the reaction time (at least for the leather) was much faster than the time it takes to fume the wood (measured in minutes, not hours). The real time component with the vinegaroon was making it, which I discovered could be greatly accelerated by adding hydrogen peroxide and/or heating the vinegar steel mix.

    Just something I thought I'd throw out there to consider.

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