I am also looking for enterpris oil penitrating wood stain
Wood stain is abosorbed into the wood, so the wood takes on the color of the stain. This is why the features of the wood are still visible, unlike with paint.
Yes, any coating on wood will make it last longer. Depending on the product and the environment the stain may last anywhere from a couple of years to ten years.
You can stain balsa wood.
It could look blotchy depending on the type of wood and if it's a colored stain.
With tree types of wood you may have to stain each one separately. All three types of wood will have different porosity and maybe a different base color of their own which will make staining the same color a challenge. Perhaps an opaque stain would work better allowing you to see the grain of the wood but have a more uniform color.
Wood stain is abosorbed into the wood, so the wood takes on the color of the stain. This is why the features of the wood are still visible, unlike with paint.
Pat Buchanan did once make a commercial for ZAR wood stain.
No, although a good sanding would do. The purpose of wood stain is to finish wood, while still exposing the grains and patterns of the wood - priming the wood before staining it is a bit contrary to that point.
Yes, any coating on wood will make it last longer. Depending on the product and the environment the stain may last anywhere from a couple of years to ten years.
You can stain balsa wood.
Wood stain is for sealing and emphasising the natural colour of wood
After. If you waterproof before staining, the stain won't make it to the wood to stain it.
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.
Pine is the hardest wood to stain becuase it absorbs the stain to erratically. anonymous@oola.com
It could look blotchy depending on the type of wood and if it's a colored stain.
With tree types of wood you may have to stain each one separately. All three types of wood will have different porosity and maybe a different base color of their own which will make staining the same color a challenge. Perhaps an opaque stain would work better allowing you to see the grain of the wood but have a more uniform color.
Wood is wood.