Vintage Wood Stain Colors
Use our stain colour guide to pick the right stain colour for your wood projects including hardwoods.
Vintage wood stain colors. Superior wood stain saves time energy and provides a great value. Minwax has the perfect wood stain colour for every project. Unfortunately when woodworkers try to duplicate that color on new pine by using stain the results are usually disappointing. Maple amber color with red undertones.
Each opacity offers a level of color that reveals more or less of the wood. Antique pine often has a dark mellow color. Popular 18th 20th century american stock color. With arborcoat exterior stain you get year round protection plus a timeless palette of driftwood grays warm russets and woodland greens.
Choose from several opacities translucent semi transparent semi solid and solid. Use the dry rag to clean up stain in corners or molding profiles. Aged barrel premium fast dry interior wood stain. You can control the color strength on the latewood by either wiping the wood clean or leaving a little glaze behind.
Vintage aqua premium fast dry interior wood stain provides high quality color in 1 coat to enhance the natural beauty of interior wood surfaces. Use one rag to pick up the bulk of the stain. Always test stain on a hidden area of the wood to verify desired color. Vintage aqua premium fast dry interior wood stain.
The colors shown are for reference purposes only. When used on walnut stocks stain has stronger red undertones than walnut stain. Antique white premium fast dry interior wood stain. Fast drying formula dries in 1 hour and uses nano pigments to offer superior color and coverage.
They have been reproduced using digital production techniques. Produces an exceptionally fine color on english walnut. Giving your home a perfect color palette goes beyond paint. Minwax wood finish is a penetrating oil based wood stain which provides beautiful rich color that enhances the natural wood grain.
Weathered gray premium fast dry interior wood stain. When it becomes saturated it will leave a thin layer of color behind. It s easy to end up with megablotches and it s hard to avoid grain reversal a peculiar effect that makes stained pine look unnatural.