JJNorman2323 Report post Posted July 15, 2015 This is not my work, and I must give credit where credit is due, this looks awesome. I have tried and tried to achieve this look with my dye and can't seem to come close. Does anyone know how this look is achieved? Do I need to use a combo of dyes, antiques, and stains or is this something that can be done with dye alone? Thanks for any help, it is greatly appreciated! Josh Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DoubleC Report post Posted July 15, 2015 The only thing I can think of that might give that look would be airbrushing. Cheryl Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JLSleather Report post Posted July 15, 2015 LOTSA ways that could be done. Look in the right place, you might find entire cow sides already dyed like that. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
johnv474 Report post Posted July 15, 2015 Dye one color, say, cherry red or chestnut. Take another color that is several shades darker, mahogany perhaps. Use a long haired round paintbrush about 1/2" diameter, give or take. Brush across the darker dye, varying pressure and not going in a straight line. Repeat with another application, possibly another shade (or less diluted dye) after the first has dried. A flat paintbrush could be used as well for wider sections, applied lightly. Use darker shades, not black usually (looks fake).More advanced methods include the types of woodgraining done to restore antique car dashboards, but that is much more involved and requires custom templates and some tinkering.I've played around with both some, but just to test the concept, not on finished goods. PS dry brushing can help spread the dye and give the grained effect as well. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
byggyns Report post Posted July 16, 2015 I think dry brushing would be the first thing I would try. Dye your base color- a light shade like a tan. Then use your dark brown or another dark color with a dry brush technique. You can vary the intensity of the dark color by diluting it to give you multiple shades in the grain. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DS STRAPS Report post Posted July 16, 2015 Maybe search some faux painting techniques http://www.faux-painting-techniques.com/ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites