kottan said "Ken, which kind of alcohol do you use for it, ethanol or isopropyl and how much %? I wonder if the alcohol would dissolve the stain?. "
I still have some industrial alcohol here from the Tilshead factory (strictly speaking I do need a license for it) but I don't drink it!
Yes, it will take off a little stain but in this case it would take off loads of other stuff as well. The De Luxe finishing was one coat of light tan spirit stain burnt in and then one more coat applied and wiped off. Then the pipe was stripped of the stain using pumice and a felt wheel so the stain served as a background stain used just to highlight the grain.
Crayola was used on all Charatan logos until they bought a stamping machine (after Reuben had died) using a roll of white correction type tape which the heated stamp die would press into the vulcanite. All Upshall logos were done with Crayola. Barry said it lasted longer than the tape method. It can be tricky to do at first, you really need to 'work the wax in' and wipe it off in a certain way and sometimes go over it again two or three times. Reuben got Barry to do this job when he first started at Charatan in 1959 aged 15. I still have the Crayola white and gold wax sticks from the 1980s that I found when I visited the empty Upshall factory in 2018 in a draw along with other stuff from my past which had been untouched since 1989!
I still have some industrial alcohol here from the Tilshead factory (strictly speaking I do need a license for it) but I don't drink it!
Yes, it will take off a little stain but in this case it would take off loads of other stuff as well. The De Luxe finishing was one coat of light tan spirit stain burnt in and then one more coat applied and wiped off. Then the pipe was stripped of the stain using pumice and a felt wheel so the stain served as a background stain used just to highlight the grain.
Crayola was used on all Charatan logos until they bought a stamping machine (after Reuben had died) using a roll of white correction type tape which the heated stamp die would press into the vulcanite. All Upshall logos were done with Crayola. Barry said it lasted longer than the tape method. It can be tricky to do at first, you really need to 'work the wax in' and wipe it off in a certain way and sometimes go over it again two or three times. Reuben got Barry to do this job when he first started at Charatan in 1959 aged 15. I still have the Crayola white and gold wax sticks from the 1980s that I found when I visited the empty Upshall factory in 2018 in a draw along with other stuff from my past which had been untouched since 1989!