ThomasK Report post Posted February 11, 2014 Hi Folks, I Need some help. I carved and tooled a dog. I used a hairblade after all the other work was done. After drying I use Fiebings prof. Oildye for coloring the dog. In the hairblade cuts the Color was very intense. Where it was beveled, or Areas where used a modelling tool it has hardly accepted color........... It Looks horrible. Are there other Colors which Color uniform, or will the Problem be the same? Unfortunately I have no camera at the Moment and can not Show you the Picture of Horror, perhaps just as well for your eyes ( less pain) Greetings Thomas Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JLSleather Report post Posted February 11, 2014 Any dye will act a bit like that. Tooled areas are compressed, which can restrict the dye pentetration a bit. On the other hand, the hair blade - as you know - gives it a bunch of grooves the dye can crawl in. Put the two side by side and it looks even worse than it is. So, no, a different dye is no so much the issue as a different technique. Less, or more. Light, or heavy. You just need to get used to not doing it all the same way. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ClayB Report post Posted February 12, 2014 I have always gotten uneven results when using dyes, stains or antiques over a texture created with a hair blade. I've found the best way to color something with a hair texture is by using acrylic paints (watered down, layered on to build up colors). Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
WyomingSlick Report post Posted February 12, 2014 Hi Folks, I Need some help. I suggest you get some of Al Stohlmans books on figure carving and/or dyeing where he covers the dry brush technique. Study them and try that approach out. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites