Hi all, I'm in the process of restoring a Stanwell pipe I got via as a Christmas gift for my friend. (I'm a beginner to the whole restoration process.) I've sanded it down to a point where I would do the first application of a contrast stain so I would later sand it down to a finished point, do a final stain, and then polish it.
I'm looking at the beautiful grain of this pipe and wondering how well it would go if chose not to stain it and instead to polish and wax it without a stain. I saw this quote from Trever Talbert via Pipedia: "Ironically, the highest grade pipes have the easiest finishes, because I don't stain them at all. Instead, I leave them in their natural golden-brown coloring and simply wax them and polish them." (Trever Talbert on Finishing - Pipedia - https://pipedia.org/wiki/Trever_Talbert_on_Finishing). Has anybody tried this or have any luck with this? Is something advisable to give a shot?
I can post pictures of what I'm working with but likely not until late tonight, but this is the image from the seller before I sanded it, cleaned it out, cleaned the stem, etc.
EDIT: FIxed Capitalization in Title - Bob
I'm looking at the beautiful grain of this pipe and wondering how well it would go if chose not to stain it and instead to polish and wax it without a stain. I saw this quote from Trever Talbert via Pipedia: "Ironically, the highest grade pipes have the easiest finishes, because I don't stain them at all. Instead, I leave them in their natural golden-brown coloring and simply wax them and polish them." (Trever Talbert on Finishing - Pipedia - https://pipedia.org/wiki/Trever_Talbert_on_Finishing). Has anybody tried this or have any luck with this? Is something advisable to give a shot?
I can post pictures of what I'm working with but likely not until late tonight, but this is the image from the seller before I sanded it, cleaned it out, cleaned the stem, etc.
EDIT: FIxed Capitalization in Title - Bob
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