Any advice on how to match the color of "Oxblood"? It's a little lighter than the color of Burgundy.
The top rim and just below. Nothing major. It's a rough finish and I took some off with Murphy soap trying to clean it up.What area size are you talking about? Smooth or rough finish? It makes a difference. Picture's would help.
Thank you very much sir!Get some burgundy/oxblood stain and dilute it with alcohol. Get a piece of scrap and coat it until you match. If you're going to top coat it with something like shellac be sure to do that on your test piece as well. Once you figured it out and are satisfied, stain the pipe. That's probably the safest way. Or......you can take the diluted stain and do the pipe until you are satisfied. That's a bit risky though, you may not get it right the first time. Use a Q-tip to apply the stain.
Isopropyl works fine.One last thing, what alcahol does one reccomend for dilution?
I use denatured alcohol in the shop.One last thing, what alcahol does one reccomend for dilution?
This made me think. I always wondered why the new iterations never look like the old oxblood pipes from days of yore. The colours are close but there is always a quality lacking and your post was the epiphany for me. Its the oxidation of the oxblood on the meerschaum which gives it that colour, its almost like a rust colour with the rich red mahogany.You could be old school and get ahold of some real ox blood. It's where that particular shade of purplish red gets it's name from. And yeah the real thing was used for that color prior to modern stains.
Fieblings Oxblood stain, heavily diluted.
I'm literally going to be smoking my oxblood pipes in a cow pasture at times.You could be old school and get ahold of some real ox blood. It's where that particular shade of purplish red gets it's name from. And yeah the real thing was used for that color prior to modern stains.
well fortunately it will show them whos boss.I'm literally going to be smoking my oxblood pipes in a cow pasture at times.
