I'm not a luthier, but I used to be a gun smith, and many times when repairing wooden stocks on old rifles, muskets and shotguns, I found that baking the wood I was going to use for an inletted repair would help me obtain better results. We had an old toaster oven in the shop and I would wrap the piece of wood I was using tightly in aluminum foil to keep air from getting is, then baking it for 20-30 minutes at 160 degrees fahrenheit (About 71 Celsius) wood allow me to better match my stain to the rest of the wood of the stock. It would darken the wood I used slightly, but make it so it would absorb the stain better.
Would there be any benefit to using a vacuum seal bag to retain the moisture when you do this? Then wrap with foil. This is within sous vide temp range and time. Or was it the reduction of moisture that you were looking for to give the glue somewhere to go? Something else?
@erikthompson404 we did it to control the moisture content and to allow us better absorption of stains and dyes. We usually have enough material we could put in a dogbone to strengthen the connection, plus we use Accra glass as our adhesive for the most part. Not Tite Bond. Accra glass is much stronger, but it is much harder to stain or color match, so we use any method we can to make our job easier.
@williamarroyo-g9z Without knowing what the film is, I can only recommend a rubbing compound with a mild abrasive. I have used powdered pumice with some distilled water like piano makers do to remove stains from old oils in some wooden stocks.
A little bit of potassium permanganate helps age wood quickly to get an oxidized old wood appearance for color matching. Susan Gardner has a video from some years ago showing how to use potassium permanganate to oxidize wood to color match new wood to old wood. Repeated coats slowly builds up the oxidation and color matching. I oxidized a piece of wood for a chip out of a back of a guitar before I glued. Just information. :) Great restoration. Great nails!!
I’m an old countryboy from Tennessee USA. I’ve always considered myself being pretty good at figuring out how to do things when I didn’t have specialized tools to complete the job. I see you doing things much the same way I would in a lot of cases plus I have learned a lot from watching you. You do an excellent job at all you do. The key is to start out with the intention of doing outstanding work with excellence as the goal. It is evident that you do that with each job. Great work, never change your methods or compromise on quality work. Thank you for posting your work on TH-cam.
Done a really nice repair job I was in the piano instrument antique restoration business for over 40 years retired now I don't mind helping people I used to have people bring me instruments all types of instruments for me to restore refinish touch up the ones that knew me didn't bother to try to do it themselves because they knew I was an expert color man people in the business would bring me stuff they just couldn't do and it wasn't a finish that I couldn't match aged or not I will give you a little advice if you would have started with some Sherwin-Williams fruitwood tinting color and added a little Violet to it to kill that yellow you could have matched that finish a lot better mixture of glazing and shading would do the best job I used to use a touch up gun or airbrush for my shading and Clears mixture of automotive dye stains red ,and oil stains without varnish in it , I would use oy yellow dry stain which you can find online a real clear blue tinting color from paint store and violet from there as well to kill yellow when I needed too you can practice on a scrap piece add your colors together the woods not going to take it perfect that's why you need shading which you take your colors when you get it correct you add it to lacker thinner dissolve it good strain through a paint strainer into some lacquer that's how you create your shading learning to do this alone will increase your business ten fold from the person that can't match colors probably took me 7 to 10 years before I could match everything but I learned how to do it it paid dividends doing over a million dollars worth of work in my career.
Martin guitars are my favorite. I have a 1957 0-18 that my mother bought in 1959. I love watching your work. I’m praying for you and your country. 🙏🏼🇺🇦
Hey Tanya, I use to repair, and refinish antique furniture. When I had a problem with a new piece of wood, that I could not match with the old piece, I would take a scrap piece of the new wood, and then mix different amounts of stain, trying to achieve the right color. Always write down the amounts of the formulas that you mix, so you will have it for later, when you finally do achieve the right mix, (color). I hope this can be of some help to you. By the way; Great work!👌😁
I kind of like it when you can see that an instrument has been repaired, especially when the repair is done well otherwise. It gives it character and shows that someone thinks it's worth taking care of.
I am wondering if that soundboard is actually made of red ceder; that looks too dark to be spruce. Also, the grain is very fine so that's what makes me think it's ceder. That being said, you have made it playable and that's what matters. I have also had to improvise because I didn't have the correct woods, so I understand perfectly. These kinds of repairs serve as a reminder for taking care of the things we like. Great work, thanks for sharing and keep it up!
Yup looks like cedar (maybe just old spruce TBH). But even with the same wood species it's always super hard to color match finish repairs. Depends on the original wood finish also. I find it easier to apply a layer of shellac to seal the wood, then apply colored laquer over the repair with an airbrush. Then finish with a few coats of natural laquer.
An old Martin given a new life through your care and skill. What a joy to watch! That fretboard looked like ebony rather than rosewood. Great work as always Tanya. Wishing you safety and happier times for your beautiful country. Peace ✌️
Very fine work, I'm watching from NZ, I'm just an old guy now,and I really enjoy watching professional's do their work, I have learnt now ( by watching) how to do simple repairs & it's thanks to you and similar videos I'm able to do it, I recently did total repair to an acoustic given to my Brother,it was totally crushed,bent neck etc, & it really came up well, bone nut and saddle, I really surprised myself, thanks again 😊
This guitar reminds me of what they do in Japan (iirc) when something is broken. Kintsugi Google says it's called. I like the fact that you can still see where the missing piece of wood was. Tons of character on this guitar. Also I hope from the bottom of my heart that the blackouts will end very soon and that people in Ukraine can live in peace again 🙏
I always enjoy watching you work, your attention to detail and willingness to breath new life into every instrument you work on is a joy to watch.Stay safe. I stand with Ukraine!
Your mentor must be very proud of your achievements, you do exceptional work 👏. I hope and pray for peace and safety for you and your country, and for all wars on earth to end. 🌎 🙏
Excellent and thoughtful work Tanya. Time will mellow the patch so don’t feel bad. Your job was to repair it -which you did - not to erase its history. That guitar was and now can again be well-loved and played.
I have had success blending new wood against old wood by torching the piece of new wood with fire slightly to brown it first. Like toasted bread. Thanks for your great videoes ❤
Very GOOD JOB Tanya !!! I enjoyed the videos of your guitar builds the most. They sounded the best of most I have heard !!!! Sustain forever and ever; YOU my dear are on to something special indeed !!! Best of luck in the future and I hope you make more videos :)
Spectacular work, Tanya. I know you're not satisfied with the color match, but your repair turned out far better than I thought possible. I've done similar types of repairs on furniture and cabinets, but I'd be terrified to try it on a guitar! Your skills never fail to impress me.
Thomas Johnson put out a great video on color matching repairs on antique furniture. His way of explaining things is extremely clear. The guitar repair looks great!
I had the same issue with the wood needing to be just a shade darker and added a light Coffee Stain and added it until it hit the right shade. You do good work and you are very concise in getting it completed. Thank you for an interesting video.
What great results. A lot of patience, skill, and finesse. The repair adds character to the guitar. Musicians have a strong attachment to their instruments and hang on to them. I have a Fender from 30+ years ago which has travelled with me over 1,000s of miles and is unique to me. I am sure the owner will be delighted to have his "old friend" restored and will be excited to hear it sing again. Slava Ukraini 🇺🇦
When you're using a much lighter color of wood to patch, get everything sanded down with around a 400 grit final sanding. Then mask off so only the lighter wood is exposed. Lightly mist the lighter wood with water. Let it completely dry. When you stain, the wood will absorb much more of the stain, and very evenly.
As always nice work!!! I use angelous dyes.. you can put them on and dilute them after applied to the wood to varying degrees to match shades.. works really well..
Trying to match patina is a specialty in and of itself. Even when successful, years down the road, chances are good the material will betray you. Beautiful work. Respect.
Matching wood is always a crapshoot for me. I've gotten decent results applying coffee and tea to new pine and oak as kind of a pre-stain so that it more closely matches old work, haven't tried it on spruce, though. Whatever, killer job as usual, always glad to see you've got a new video up!
Well, in the first few seconds of the video, the biggest 2 problems that I noticed were the broken top (treble edge) and the awful Gibson (?) pickguard (grin) ! Very nicely done repair!
Beautiful work. Polishing, polishing, polishing with six fingers. Will Ted adopt that process? 😊 Matching the wood on the top might have been nice, but there's interest and beauty in a well executed repair. The Japanese highlight repairs to broken stoneware with gold filigree.
I have a 1971 Martin D18 that is very difficult to play; however, it sounds like a dream. I’m hoping to get the action lowered to make it easier to play. It also needs the pick guard replaced. Your video inspired me to take action! Thank you so much. 🎉
Awesome work as always Tanya! My 6 year old son watched this one with me and I explained everything as you were working and he was fascinated. Have you considered longer videos with less editing as an option for patreon members? I have a feeling that would be a popular thing.
You should use tinting laquer to blend the new wood..using stains just gets down into the wood and makes it impossible to match.Also try to find some old damaged guitars that have the same tight grain cedar that you can use for repairs!😊
That pickguard looks like a lawsuit era and the nut looks like the Empire State Building! You fixed the nut so well! Put a Tanya sticker over the top repair where the color was hard to match!
I've seen many videos showing just how hard it is to match wood color on that type of repair. Maybe it would be better to test the stains on some prospective wood patches first, and pick the one that matches best to use it for the repair.
I'm not a luthier, but I used to be a gun smith, and many times when repairing wooden stocks on old rifles, muskets and shotguns, I found that baking the wood I was going to use for an inletted repair would help me obtain better results. We had an old toaster oven in the shop and I would wrap the piece of wood I was using tightly in aluminum foil to keep air from getting is, then baking it for 20-30 minutes at 160 degrees fahrenheit (About 71 Celsius) wood allow me to better match my stain to the rest of the wood of the stock. It would darken the wood I used slightly, but make it so it would absorb the stain better.
Would there be any benefit to using a vacuum seal bag to retain the moisture when you do this? Then wrap with foil. This is within sous vide temp range and time. Or was it the reduction of moisture that you were looking for to give the glue somewhere to go? Something else?
@erikthompson404 we did it to control the moisture content and to allow us better absorption of stains and dyes. We usually have enough material we could put in a dogbone to strengthen the connection, plus we use Accra glass as our adhesive for the most part. Not Tite Bond. Accra glass is much stronger, but it is much harder to stain or color match, so we use any method we can to make our job easier.
I have a Yamaha classical white cloudy film on it. I try different things, but it doesn’t come off. What do you suggest?
@williamarroyo-g9z Without knowing what the film is, I can only recommend a rubbing compound with a mild abrasive. I have used powdered pumice with some distilled water like piano makers do to remove stains from old oils in some wooden stocks.
@@greylocke100 will send you picture so you can see the problem better. Send me your email if that's ok. Thanks Tanya
Miss Tanya is fearless! Wishing her and her country, peace and prosperity.
😢😢😢
A little bit of potassium permanganate helps age wood quickly to get an oxidized old wood appearance for color matching. Susan Gardner has a video from some years ago showing how to use potassium permanganate to oxidize wood to color match new wood to old wood. Repeated coats slowly builds up the oxidation and color matching. I oxidized a piece of wood for a chip out of a back of a guitar before I glued. Just information. :) Great restoration. Great nails!!
I’m an old countryboy from Tennessee USA. I’ve always considered myself being pretty good at figuring out how to do things when I didn’t have specialized tools to complete the job. I see you doing things much the same way I would in a lot of cases plus I have learned a lot from watching you. You do an excellent job at all you do. The key is to start out with the intention of doing outstanding work with excellence as the goal. It is evident that you do that with each job. Great work, never change your methods or compromise on quality work. Thank you for posting your work on TH-cam.
Matching colours on wood repairs is always the hard part I find. Love watching you work, thank you.
Especially when dealing with aging. Since you have to worry about them being the same colour years down the line.
Also the quality, hardness etc. of the replacement wood makes it nearly impossible to match.
I don't mind the slight discoloration. This guitar deserves to show its scars! Beautiful work!
Done a really nice repair job I was in the piano instrument antique restoration business for over 40 years retired now I don't mind helping people I used to have people bring me instruments all types of instruments for me to restore refinish touch up the ones that knew me didn't bother to try to do it themselves because they knew I was an expert color man people in the business would bring me stuff they just couldn't do and it wasn't a finish that I couldn't match aged or not I will give you a little advice if you would have started with some Sherwin-Williams fruitwood tinting color and added a little Violet to it to kill that yellow you could have matched that finish a lot better mixture of glazing and shading would do the best job I used to use a touch up gun or airbrush for my shading and Clears mixture of automotive dye stains red ,and oil stains without varnish in it , I would use oy yellow dry stain which you can find online a real clear blue tinting color from paint store and violet from there as well to kill yellow when I needed too you can practice on a scrap piece add your colors together the woods not going to take it perfect that's why you need shading which you take your colors when you get it correct you add it to lacker thinner dissolve it good strain through a paint strainer into some lacquer that's how you create your shading learning to do this alone will increase your business ten fold from the person that can't match colors probably took me 7 to 10 years before I could match everything but I learned how to do it it paid dividends doing over a million dollars worth of work in my career.
It’s simply amazing the patience and attention to detail that goes into the repairs this woman accomplishes.
Hello Tanya!
Congratulations on your excellent work!
It's a pleasure watching your videos, due to your patience and attention to small details.
Martin guitars are my favorite. I have a 1957 0-18 that my mother bought in 1959. I love watching your work. I’m praying for you and your country. 🙏🏼🇺🇦
Hey Tanya, I use to repair, and refinish antique furniture. When I had a problem with a new piece of wood, that I could not match with the old piece, I would take a scrap piece of the new wood, and then mix different amounts of stain, trying to achieve the right color. Always write down the amounts of the formulas that you mix, so you will have it for later, when you finally do achieve the right mix, (color). I hope this can be of some help to you. By the way; Great work!👌😁
I kind of like it when you can see that an instrument has been repaired, especially when the repair is done well otherwise. It gives it character and shows that someone thinks it's worth taking care of.
Tanya, you made that guitar special because of the care and skill you added to it
I am wondering if that soundboard is actually made of red ceder; that looks too dark to be spruce. Also, the grain is very fine so that's what makes me think it's ceder.
That being said, you have made it playable and that's what matters. I have also had to improvise because I didn't have the correct woods, so I understand perfectly.
These kinds of repairs serve as a reminder for taking care of the things we like.
Great work, thanks for sharing and keep it up!
Yeah, I would have guessed cedar as well based on the grain
Yup looks like cedar (maybe just old spruce TBH). But even with the same wood species it's always super hard to color match finish repairs. Depends on the original wood finish also. I find it easier to apply a layer of shellac to seal the wood, then apply colored laquer over the repair with an airbrush. Then finish with a few coats of natural laquer.
An old Martin given a new life through your care and skill. What a joy to watch! That fretboard looked like ebony rather than rosewood. Great work as always Tanya. Wishing you safety and happier times for your beautiful country. Peace ✌️
Very fine work, I'm watching from NZ, I'm just an old guy now,and I really enjoy watching professional's do their work, I have learnt now ( by watching) how to do simple repairs & it's thanks to you and similar videos I'm able to do it, I recently did total repair to an acoustic given to my Brother,it was totally crushed,bent neck etc, & it really came up well, bone nut and saddle, I really surprised myself, thanks again 😊
I love how you bring us right up close to the detail of your work. Brave girl! Thank you for that and wonderful work as always!
This guitar reminds me of what they do in Japan (iirc) when something is broken. Kintsugi Google says it's called. I like the fact that you can still see where the missing piece of wood was. Tons of character on this guitar. Also I hope from the bottom of my heart that the blackouts will end very soon and that people in Ukraine can live in peace again 🙏
Coffee with Tanya. A great start to the day!☕️
Tanya, the finest Guitar Doctor 🎸!! If you have a sick guitar on your hands, she will treat it like a real patient! 😂 Beautiful work Tanya!! 😊
Thank you for sharing another great video. Stay safe and keep making the world a better place through music.
I have sooooo much fun watching your work. I love bringing something back to life. This is what I wish I had more time to do. Thank you
That patch was beautiful, nicely done for sure. Definitely a labor of love.
Beautiful work. Always a pleasure to watch someone into their craft 👍
I always enjoy watching you work, your attention to detail and willingness to breath new life into every instrument you work on is a joy to watch.Stay safe. I stand with Ukraine!
Always enjoy watching you Tanya vielen dank!
Enjoyable video!
I hope for peace in your country soon!
Your mentor must be very proud of your achievements, you do exceptional work 👏. I hope and pray for peace and safety for you and your country, and for all wars on earth to end. 🌎 🙏
Love your work. I find it very relaxing to watch. And your fingernails are always a surprise. Very creative 😃
Thank you for taking the strings off like a normal person and not just cutting them!
There was nothing wrong with them, might as well reuse them and save money.
thanks for ur content, watching ur videos is like meditation
Excellent job as always, Tanya. Always a pleasure to see you doing your magic.
Excellent and thoughtful work Tanya. Time will mellow the patch so don’t feel bad. Your job was to repair it -which you did - not to erase its history. That guitar was and now can again be well-loved and played.
It's always nice to see a new video from you Tanya, and as always, you never disappoint. 👍
I have had success blending new wood against old wood by torching the piece of new wood with fire slightly to brown it first. Like toasted bread. Thanks for your great videoes ❤
Very GOOD JOB Tanya !!! I enjoyed the videos of your guitar builds the most. They sounded the best of most I have heard !!!! Sustain forever and ever; YOU my dear are on to something special indeed !!! Best of luck in the future and I hope you make more videos :)
Amazing work! True artistry! 👏
I just dropped in. Couldn´t stop watching. Beautiful work and filmed too. Thanks for sharing :-)
Spectacular work, Tanya. I know you're not satisfied with the color match, but your repair turned out far better than I thought possible. I've done similar types of repairs on furniture and cabinets, but I'd be terrified to try it on a guitar! Your skills never fail to impress me.
As a retired massage therapist I really enjoy watching your manual dexterity!!!!!!!!!
Thomas Johnson put out a great video on color matching repairs on antique furniture. His way of explaining things is extremely clear. The guitar repair looks great!
I will definitely check it out!
You do great work, I really enjoy watching.
Excellent approach and execution.
It’s thrilling to witness your progress and skills.
Sincere Kudos.
I do love your new nails. Them are soooo amazing!
It is so satisfiying seen your hard work and dedication you put in each of your projects, amazing!!!
Greetings from Guayaquil (Ecuador)
Any signs of damage repair on a guitar provides it with character, a sense of history. I think it's beautiful the way it came out.
Nice job! I'm amazed by your craftsmanship given the impossible repair job you were faced with.
I'm so glad to see your ok . I've been worried since all this has taken place . Yes I love ur nails .
Baby and Big Baby Taylors are notorious for this.i have fixed several. I love to watch❤ you work.
I love watching these repairs you do on guitars 🎸
I had the same issue with the wood needing to be just a shade darker and added a light Coffee Stain and added it until it hit the right shade. You do good work and you are very concise in getting it completed. Thank you for an interesting video.
Ще одна чудова робота, Таня... Точна та прискіплива. Було приємно дивитися...
Your work is always inspiring... I could watch it all day...
What great results. A lot of patience, skill, and finesse. The repair adds character to the guitar. Musicians have a strong attachment to their instruments and hang on to them. I have a Fender from 30+ years ago which has travelled with me over 1,000s of miles and is unique to me. I am sure the owner will be delighted to have his "old friend" restored and will be excited to hear it sing again.
Slava Ukraini 🇺🇦
Beatiful job ! You can tell how much cares her job when is done!
Great content. I live in West Texas, surrounded by guitars, but love to watch your craftsmanship. By th way, your fingernails look great.
When you're using a much lighter color of wood to patch, get everything sanded down with around a 400 grit final sanding. Then mask off so only the lighter wood is exposed. Lightly mist the lighter wood with water. Let it completely dry. When you stain, the wood will absorb much more of the stain, and very evenly.
How about putting up your video Shartward?
Your videos are my favorite, I learn so much.
As always nice work!!!
I use angelous dyes.. you can put them on and dilute them after applied to the wood to varying degrees to match shades.. works really well..
Hey Tanya, glad you’re back with another cool video, nice work, from Paul and Rodie (meow! 😺) 🇨🇦
Well done Tanya. The wood will darken naturally with age and it also shows it's been used and played. Some people pay a fortune for reliced guitars😂
That was a thing of beauty. Great job! Love!
always good to see that a Martin will live on 🙂
Good to see you again.wonderful work!
Trying to match patina is a specialty in and of itself. Even when successful, years down the road, chances are good the material will betray you. Beautiful work. Respect.
Love your new nails! And nice work on that Martin
What you do is hypnotic ! My hat's off to you, Madam !
Fantastic job, Tanya!
Matching wood is always a crapshoot for me. I've gotten decent results applying coffee and tea to new pine and oak as kind of a pre-stain so that it more closely matches old work, haven't tried it on spruce, though. Whatever, killer job as usual, always glad to see you've got a new video up!
I like that you can see the repair to the top, it looks really cool
Pure craftsmanship. The blackout is a reminder to us that you are not as safe as you should be.
Ciao Tanya un bel lavoro come sempre, ottimo quel pennarello marrone per il ritocco funziona davvero bene .
I'm speechless, nice job!!
this was so amazing I have watched it 3 times now very cool!
Hallo Tanya,
tolle Arbeit, tolle Videos. Bin dabei meine zweite Ukulele zu bauen. Habe mir viele Tipps von Dir abgesehen. Danke!
You're a true Master!!! Congratulations!!!!
Beautiful restoration!!!!!
you are very talented. Thank you for sharing!!
I admire your skills. I love watching your guitar magic.
looks amazing! it may have been cool to cover up that new piece with a "burst" finish around the edge. It looks cool though!
Well, in the first few seconds of the video, the biggest 2 problems that I noticed were the broken top (treble edge) and the awful Gibson (?) pickguard (grin) ! Very nicely done repair!
Beautiful guitar& beautiful repair work
You had a very good teacher and you have excellent talent.
Fabulous work Tanya
What you did is amazing!!!!!!!
Wonderful skill and fascinating to watch. Many thanks.
Tanya you are an artist! So good at your craft! I wish you were my neighbor! Peace and Love to you!
Ambassador Tanya speaks for her country without saying a word . 🎉
Great job Tanya!
Beautiful work. Polishing, polishing, polishing with six fingers. Will Ted adopt that process? 😊 Matching the wood on the top might have been nice, but there's interest and beauty in a well executed repair. The Japanese highlight repairs to broken stoneware with gold filigree.
I have a 1971 Martin D18 that is very difficult to play; however, it sounds like a dream. I’m hoping to get the action lowered to make it easier to play. It also needs the pick guard replaced.
Your video inspired me to take action! Thank you so much. 🎉
Awesome work as always Tanya! My 6 year old son watched this one with me and I explained everything as you were working and he was fascinated.
Have you considered longer videos with less editing as an option for patreon members? I have a feeling that would be a popular thing.
The top repair was so satisfying.
Very nice as always. Well done.
Philip
You should use tinting laquer to blend the new wood..using stains just gets down into the wood and makes it impossible to match.Also try to find some old damaged guitars that have the same tight grain cedar that you can use for repairs!😊
this is great..i really learn alot from you Miss. Thanks.
Another fine job! I love your videos.
That pickguard looks like a lawsuit era and the nut looks like the Empire State Building! You fixed the nut so well! Put a Tanya sticker over the top repair where the color was hard to match!
I've seen many videos showing just how hard it is to match wood color on that type of repair. Maybe it would be better to test the stains on some prospective wood patches first, and pick the one that matches best to use it for the repair.
Great job! I have the same guitar (not broken) and they’re worth fixing - awesome playability and tone.
The right tools,patience,some knowledge,goes a long way