I need advice on how to work with cedar. The customer is asking for a white washed background, V-carved copy, paint filled black.
For the white wash, I'm testing thinned Ronan Aquacote. It achieves the look but I'm not so confident on how well the paint mask will stick throughout fabrication. I'd really like to seal the wood but I'm not sure what to use. Shellac has a tendency to fail, and Poly Urethane doesn't always play nice with latex. Searching through signs101 I came across this product - Nautral Cetol SRD RE exterior wood finish which seems to be an answer, any thoughts if the latex would cause an issue?
A second option would be a Behr product, Semi transparent waterproofing stain and sealer. Exterior use, comes in transparent white, easy to get. On the surface, this sounds ideal.
Lastly, I recently saw a carved Mahogany sign where the paint filled copy bled into the sign. As if the grain sucked in the paint. I could tell this sign wasn't sealed in anyway, which I suspect was the cause. I'd prime the letters before painting and that should stop any bleeding, right?
Thanks.
For the white wash, I'm testing thinned Ronan Aquacote. It achieves the look but I'm not so confident on how well the paint mask will stick throughout fabrication. I'd really like to seal the wood but I'm not sure what to use. Shellac has a tendency to fail, and Poly Urethane doesn't always play nice with latex. Searching through signs101 I came across this product - Nautral Cetol SRD RE exterior wood finish which seems to be an answer, any thoughts if the latex would cause an issue?
A second option would be a Behr product, Semi transparent waterproofing stain and sealer. Exterior use, comes in transparent white, easy to get. On the surface, this sounds ideal.
Lastly, I recently saw a carved Mahogany sign where the paint filled copy bled into the sign. As if the grain sucked in the paint. I could tell this sign wasn't sealed in anyway, which I suspect was the cause. I'd prime the letters before painting and that should stop any bleeding, right?
Thanks.