Yes, you can stain pressure treated wood as long as it has had several months to dry out.
Formica will not accept stain, however it can be primed and painted after sanding.
If you paint over the "weathered" paint, it will chip and cause the stain to come off. Also, the stain needs a clean sanded surface in order for the wood to absorb it. Otherwise, there is no reason to use stain.
Yes, pressure treated wood is made to withstand weather without being coated, so there will be no problem waiting to apply a stain. Once you are ready, be sure to clean the wood, then allow the wood to dry before applying any stain or coating.
With a product like Thompson's Water Seal, sure you can - no problem there. The companies that make pressure treated lumber suggest you may stain or waterproof the products using a good quality stain or sealant, providing the wood itself is clean and dry. For additional information on handling pressure treated lumber, including, uses (where and where not to install it), safety and disposal of left-overs, please see the related link below.
Two or three weeks after the deck is built. You just have to wait for the lumber to dry out so the stain will penetrate the wood.
There are various ways and methods of removing the solid wood stain from the pressure treated woods. The methods includes sanding and refinishing it and striping the stain and replacing it.
it would be a brush, one with some bristles or something
Formica will not accept stain, however it can be primed and painted after sanding.
yes
Yes, pressure treated wood is made to withstand weather without being coated, so there will be no problem waiting to apply a stain. Once you are ready, be sure to clean the wood, then allow the wood to dry before applying any stain or coating.
If you paint over the "weathered" paint, it will chip and cause the stain to come off. Also, the stain needs a clean sanded surface in order for the wood to absorb it. Otherwise, there is no reason to use stain.
With a product like Thompson's Water Seal, sure you can - no problem there. The companies that make pressure treated lumber suggest you may stain or waterproof the products using a good quality stain or sealant, providing the wood itself is clean and dry. For additional information on handling pressure treated lumber, including, uses (where and where not to install it), safety and disposal of left-overs, please see the related link below.
Most dresses are not stain resistant, although they can be treated with a stain resistant coating.
NGR stain is a stain (the kind found in the paint aisle, not the kind on your shirt) that will not make the wood grain fibers rise up from the surface of the wood. Raised grain may have to be sanded off.
Yes there are several reliners taht are treated to be stain resistant.
Two or three weeks after the deck is built. You just have to wait for the lumber to dry out so the stain will penetrate the wood.
Yes it will stain your hair, but no it won't stay there permanently uless the product says that it will.