at this point you should have a dark grey black wade .
how should i put this ??
what i have found is that depending on your metal and amount of acidic mix , depends on how fast the acid breaks down the material ..
also not all white vinegars are the same in PH so they will react differently .
some will react very quick and others will petter out with seemingly very little effect and need repeated additions to continue the reaction.
i have also found that the metal also has an effect . some take higher acidic levels while using iron normally doesn’t take much .
however what’s happening is the acid breaks the metal down to a given point . IE dissolves it .
but know that just because the metal is dissolved , to the point it doesn’t look like its there , doesn’t mean its dissolved to the smallest point it can Be .
so with your test batches , what your seeing is that transition . grays being larger particulate and the reds being even smaller . You can actually go so far that the amount of iron and oxides within the mix is so high that it can be reduced and used as a regent .
But when the mix stops or you hold it at the grey level , what I have found happens is that while the color sets in the softer more open wood , it doesn’t hold well in the harder more dense areas .. At first it looks like it does but as soon as you wipe it down and it dries , you suddenly begin to see grain that’s light tan to honey color or even browns.
Now if that’s the result one is looking for , Ha , 2 thumbs up . But if your looking for the more even colors with darker figure , the only way I have found to produce that is to suspend the color or add an additional wash . But with the wash you have to be very careful when finishing or you can easily rub the color back while applying the oil
Maybe im not wording this right so here is some photos of my own tests .
This mix was using distilled white vinegar from Delmonti.
The chosen metal was steel wool turned on my mill from an old Iron tractor disc control shaft .
These are progression photos taken over 4 days
this was day 3 . not the brown area wher i tried my heat gun
now this was my final test to achieve a grey
Do you see the brown tans I was talking about ?
its the grain and figure that amost the very same color as the original maple . IE the color is grainy to me .
For me , and what I was being ask to do , that is un acceptable as I know that the oils will only magnify that lighter grain where the color would not take
This was , for better or worse , what I was being ask to do . But I was not able to achieve it by the above application , I had to do it as I state din my first post .
Now all isn’t lost because as your mix ages , it can produce very good results .
I just have had little luck with it when it comes to grey