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I've used Febing's leather die to turn wood the color I wanted without effort...then oil.
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03-19-2022 05:55 AM
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I've used Febing's leather die to turn wood the color I wanted without effort...then oil.
Yes. Awesome stuff, I've used it on several of my restorations too.
It gives the wood that red-ish color i see a lot of those P13's seem to have.
It also matches different types of wood very nicely.
The technique i use was given to me by Englishman_Ca and gives a great result.
Saturate the wood as much as possible with the die, as many coats as it will take, then oil with very fine steel wool.
The steel wool removes the die that has not penetrated in the pores and you can adjust the tones by rubbing more on dark areas and rubbing less on lighter areas.
You complete the process with what he called ''boning'' ... basically rubbing a bone or somekind of tool to sorta ''polish'' the surface, giving it a ''handled'' for years look.
I'm not as good as he was but i had good results doing things that way.
I'm not at that point in the restoration yet but i will make tests on the scrap fore end tip and new wood pieces i saved, to see how it goes.
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I’ve also used leather dye to match repair patches on stocks. Works good.
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Nose cap finally done and screwed on.
I hate drilling for those screw holes ... i've fitted probably at least a dozen nose caps and only ever got one drilled without having to fiddle with the hole to get it right.
For some reason that is something i just cannot get a hang to it.
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Nice- The fun part is standing back at each step and feeling good about a project. Thanks for letting us share that. Salt Flat
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Looks nice and square, looks good.
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Your front end restoration looks so excellent that if you had not posted the pictures showing the process, most would otherwise would consider it just a weird duffle cut.
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Originally Posted by
Salt Flat
The fun part is standing back at each step and feeling good about a project.
Agreed and some steps are more satisfying than others. Some are small but popup more and give a sense of completion like the next ones, below.
Looks nice and square, looks good.
Thank you

Originally Posted by
Promo
Your front end restoration looks so excellent that if you had not posted the pictures showing the process, most would otherwise would consider it just a weird duffle cut.
And that is partially why i showed the whole process... to prove this was all done from scratch.
I know some would say buying a new stock would have been easier and faster... but where's the fun in that.
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