Members indynusp Posted January 1, 2024 Members Report Posted January 1, 2024 Hello, I am having some trouble with Yellow Spots and discolouration on my Ash wood stitching clamp. I have put some beeswax and buffed it hoping it will work but it didn’t help. Does anyone know what the cause is and how to fix it? Thanks Quote
Members purplefox66 Posted January 1, 2024 Members Report Posted January 1, 2024 Why worry about nothing Quote
Contributing Member fredk Posted January 1, 2024 Contributing Member Report Posted January 1, 2024 Ageing Quote
Members dikman Posted January 2, 2024 Members Report Posted January 2, 2024 I can't see anything wrong, looks fine to me. Quote
Members indynusp Posted January 3, 2024 Author Members Report Posted January 3, 2024 Thanks everyone for the response. I guess I was just being pedantic. Sorry for the hassle. Quote
Members Mulesaw Posted January 3, 2024 Members Report Posted January 3, 2024 @indynusp Most woods can easily get a colour stain just by a drop of water, or a greasy finger etc. If you put wax on after that it will sort of seal it in the wood. There is no harm done at all, but if you want it to be completely free of marks etc. you need to sand it all down again, and then reapply wax to seal the surface. But it is the beauty of a natural material that it will age or develop a patina. It doesn't affect the strength of the wood at all. Some wood species have "colouring" that will be activated by water. Idigbo for instance will turn really yellow if wetted. Ash is much more well mannered in that respect. :-) Quote
Members 327fed Posted January 3, 2024 Members Report Posted January 3, 2024 A buddy gave me some ash subfloor out of his 1920’s house. I knocked the nails out of it, planed it, set it in a corner of the leather hut. Pulled it out the other day, looks just like yours. And it warped. 100 years old and warped. Quote
Members JamesR Posted January 20, 2024 Members Report Posted January 20, 2024 Your ash looks fine. It is very tough wood and doesn’t react with metal like oak does, so no staining. I use it for furniture, stitching horse and stump tables. Quote
Members jarheaddoc Posted January 21, 2024 Members Report Posted January 21, 2024 Ash is a very versatile wood, sometimes referred to as the poor man's oak. A lot of it was used for furniture during the Depression. Yeah, that's nothing to worry about at all, just character marks for that particular piece of wood. Quote
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