I am a novice with a itch to try and do a kitchen cabinet that would not connect to existing but be in the kitchen and so I want it to come close to the existing. See attached photo. Many past owners have touched the kitchen with modifications so I have to believe that there is a way to come close to making the yellow maple, look without waiting for the sun to yellow it out over the years. I am not even sure that it wasn't yellowed to begin with. Is it the varnish that is yellow? Or a stain? I have done some experiments with stains and dyes but I haven't come close. Any help would be appreciated.
You might be able to get that look with just some golden oak danish oil and poly. I have a can of the golden oak danish oil that I've never found a good use for, because it's too yellow/gold for my taste.
@renners - Some cabinets have melamine and some of the newer ones on the back of the doors show a slightly more natural unfinished maple. It is obvious that the drawers and doors have had some banding put on so that you don't see the end grain or the plywood end grain. Another reason to get the color right. Thanks.
It's really just a matter of exeprimentation. Try a stain that looks close on a sample of the wood you will be using, and go from there.
I have actually done the exact same thing matching my maple kitchen cabinets. I ended up using golden oak danish oil with a bit of walnut mixed in to get the right tone.
Soft maple turns golden with regular oil based poly after 2-3 years. The maple in the box stores is kiln dried and can be brittle. If you can find air dried maple and let it sit for a couple of weeks in you shop, it will be easier to work. Choose your wood carefully and you won't have a problem.
A light coat of linseed oil will yellow maple naturally. It can take anywhere from days to weeks depending on sun exposure and the wood itself. I'd expect maple ply to yellow slower. Those look like local built (not factory) cabinets and were probably finished with oil based varnish.
Here are a couple maple projects finished with linseed oil, yellowing happened fairly rapidly.
First pic is in the shade, second in the sun. Picture was taken about one week after finishing.
With the back of the doors showing lighter than the fronts, I would guess they were finished with clear lacquer. A couple of weeks in the sun will give them a tan. I recently stacked a couple of pine cabinets on the bench under a fluorescent fitting with a shelf resting on top, there was a visible tan line where the shelf was after only a few days.
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Related Threads
?
?
?
?
?
LumberJocks Woodworking Forum
2.5M posts
96K members
Since 2006
A forum community dedicated to professional woodworkers and enthusiasts. Come join the discussion about shop safety, wood, carpentry, lumber, finishing, tools, machinery, woodworking related topics, styles, scales, reviews, accessories, classifieds, and more!