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Faux Finishing - Pickling Wood


Faux Finishing - Pickling Wood
Antiquing - Bricking - Color Washing - Granite - Lime Washing - Look of Leather - Pickling Wood - Strie - Verdigris
by Murray Anderson

Pickling  (sometimes called "liming") is a finishing technique that lightens dark wood or older wood that has darkened naturally over time. Essentially a pickled finish is a white stain applied to the surface and then wiped off allowing the underlying wood grain to show through, but the white highlights brighten the overall appearance of the wood. Pickled wood has been around for years, but these days it's enjoying resurgence in popularity among designers so you might want to know how to "pickle" wood.

Here's all you'll need

  • 1 quart of white primer paint
  • 1 cup of thinner (or water)
  • Mixing can
  • Paint brush
  • Clean cloths (old T-shirts or torn up cotton sheets)
  • Sandpaper (140 grit) or steel wool
  • Tack cloth

Pickling stain

You can buy pickling stains at your paint or home store or you can make your own. If you're going to make your own, start with a primer paint (either latex or alkyd) and dilute it about 25%, i.e. add one cup of water or paint thinner (depending on whether you're using latex or alkyd) to a quart of paint and mix it well. Use a primer rather than regular paint because primers have dull flat finishes that won’t add any shine to your pickled finished wood surface.

Choosing between latex and alkyd is a personal choice. Latex has minimal odor plus it's easy to work with and clean up, but the water in latex paint will tend to raise the grain in wood so final finishing will be more work since the surface will need to be sanded smooth again before applying varnish or polyurethane.
Alkyd has a stronger odor than latex and some people find it disagreeable, plus it is more difficult to clean up, requiring turpentine or solvent.

Pickling wood

If you're working on furniture or a cabinet, start by removing all the hardware. Depending on what you want the finished piece to look like, you'll have to decide whether to clean the hardware and reuse it for its old appearance or replace it with new.
If the wood has been sealed, you need to get the sealer off the surface since the pickling stain needs to get right into the wood grain. Use sandpaper or steel wool to remove the sealer and open the wood grain as well removing any dirt that might be on the surface. Finish the wood preparation by going over the surface with a tack cloth to remove any dust or residue from the sanding.
Start pickling by lightly dipping your brush into the pickling stain and brush it on following the direction of the wood grain. Wait a few minutes and wipe the stain with a dry cloth. Remember, you're not painting the wood, you're applying highlights so you want just some of the stain to remain down in the wood grain, but you don't want the wood to look painted white.
Keep up the process, applying the pickling stain and wiping it away with a dry cloth until you've "pickled" all the wood. It's important to use a dry cloth when wiping away the stain so you aren't putting stain back onto the wood.
Allow you newly "pickled" wood to dry thoroughly (probably overnight) then apply a clear varnish or polyurethane to protect the surface.

That's it, you've just "pickled" your first piece of wood.

Antiquing - Bricking - Color Washing - Granite - Lime Washing - Look of Leather - Pickling Wood - Strie - Verdigris
Murray Anderson is an experienced freelance writer. His work has covered a wide range of topics, but he specializes in home maintenance and how to's. He has more than 500 articles published on the web, as well as print magazines and newspapers in both the United States and Canada.








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