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Is "glaze" a process or a material, and how does it differ from stain?

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Q: Is "glaze" a process or a material, and how does it differ from stain?

Tim Inman: Glaze is a product; glazing is a technique. Commercial glazes for wood finishers are heavily pigmented and opaque. Wood finishing glazes also have a slippery additive included in the vehicle to make them workable. Glazing is a "must know" artistic technique every wood finisher should learn.

Kevin Hancock: Glazing is the process of applying a colorant between coats of finish. It is usually a thick pigment colorant, so it can be seen as a thick stain.

Michael Dresdner: In short, glaze is a thickened, slippery tinted liquid designed to be applied and blended to form a layer of floating color in between coats of finish, while stain is designed to go onto raw wood. While the wood itself largely controls how stain addresses the surface, the finisher has almost complete control of glaze, leaving it heavier or lighter in any area of the surface she chooses.
This article originally appeared in the Woodworker's Journal eZine.
Click here for information on this free, twice monthly online publication.
Copyright; 2010 Woodworker's Journal
All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval devices or systems, without prior written permission from the publisher.

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