Purchased the High Build oil... have used it on two bodies... excellent product. Working on a 12-coat finish now with this product. The glow is incredible. Well worth the purchase price and following his methods.
Thanks so much Ben for developing this oil, and for this great tutorial for it! This is the oil that I have been dreaming of finding for years, and my search is finally over now!
Ben, you are an absolute inspiration to me, as I (at the tender age of 42) embark on a career in lutherie. I am of course terrified, but steady on. I will look to you often for wisdom.
This oil is amazing ! I have done about 70% of my guitar in this oil including the neck. After 6 months of playing, this is the best feeling neck I have. I think I ended up sanding it with 1200 grit or higher after it cured. The result is silky smooth with some grain texture and this helps slide-ability of the palm. I am literally finishing all my necks in this from now on. Also it is a quite thin viscosity which makes it a dream to apply. Not too stinky either
ROFL at 1:27 as Ben says "I have a really nice relationship with a gentleman at a finishing manufacturing company" as he's sliding on his blue rubber gloves like a true proctologist lol
I need to give a thumbs up, and leave a comment, because I've learned so much from this video. It explains why my finishes were less than satisfactory. Thanks for the awesome video
Hey Ben, Love your work and your channel I've been watching since you were in the shed. What you have done with your business and art in such a short period of time is inspiring. I'm a full time Tattooer and part time guitar builder and I have learned a ton from your videos. Thank you for posting them and keep up the good work.
Vous êtes connus et apprécié pour votre travail et vos conseils chez nous en France , merci pour tout se que vous faites et un grand bravo pour votre école 😉
I just ordered a bottle of your finish along with some other tools recently to prepare for my next guitar build. It looks great, so I'm looking forward to giving it try.
You might try this oil recipe: 1 part boiled linseed oil, 1 part polyurethane, 1 part vegetable turpentine. Wipe on, wipe off excess and let dry, repeat. Note when you say the oil penetrates, yes it does more than a surface coating but if you cut a profile to inspect the penetration you will see almost no penetration; its less than half a mm. When people say the oil penetrates you get the feeling its goes in quite a few mm but it doesn't. Nice piece of Elm.
I finished my first partscaster with a 1:1 blend of boiled linseed oil and paraffin. American red alder body. 5 coats of oil, left in the hot African sun to soak in, finishing with 1200 grit wet and dry paper. Lovely and warm satin finish. But my application method was very close to what Ben is showing here.
definitely getting my hands on a bottle of this and the fretboard oil, along with some ren wax for my figured ash & ziricote guitar. I'll be using it as a resume piece for applying to a custom guitar company :D thanks for all the great videos Ben, I know I wouldn't be anywhere near where I am now if it hadn't been for all these tutorials and crazy one off build videos
Watco danish oil also suggests rubbing in their oil with fine grit sandpaper,as you have suggested.They said it also allows the sanding dust from the wood to aid in packing the open pores..Although I do not use Danish oil,it is a great tip.I would like to try your oil in the future.I have used your techniques with gunstock oils and have had very pleasing results.Way back in the 80's I teased Stuart Spector for using oil rather than lacquer.Stu finally relented and gave my shop the contract to finish all the guitars from then on until his selling to Kramer. He asked that we use a using a finish.Now that I look back at this,and see how nice an oiled and rubbed finish can be,I must write Stu an apology.
As an amateur luthier, I am usually pretty particular in what I consider a perfect guitar design. But honestly, there is not ONE thing I don't love about this guitar. I absolutely love this design!! And that wood grain is incredible!
I just bought me a buttload of crimson toys, and I love the behind the scenes action in the emails! Showing me that it's actually a pack of llamas who assemble my stuff, and a fifth army's worth of eagles bringing the goodies from Middle Earth (Europe) to America, where they belong!
Thanks for the video, the wood on that guitar body looked sick , ''that means good'', where i come from. After you were finished working on the Body, That Guitar Looks Like a MILLION BUCKS, just awesome, Cousin Figel
Ben how timely. I just in fact applied my first coat of CG Finishing oil to my home build the other night. Unfortunately it partially dissolved my underlying green dye job and now I am having to reevaluate my gameplan going forward. You previously made the video based on my comments/questions and I took cues from your 12 hour build as to how to proceed but I am an amateur after all. I am now considering a wipe on gel in either green or white which might hopefully salvage the results of my color scheme before I apply the remainder of the coats from my bottle of my CG Finishing Oil and then Renaissance wax. Wish me luck! If it is halfway decent, I'll send you some pictures. Cheers! -Matt B
Very beautiful! Just a theoretical question. If you do an oil finish and for some reason you change your mind later and you want a Lacquer finish instead. Can you just lacquer over the oil finish?
Great finish Ben. Does your finishing oil have VOCs that should be vented during use? I love finishing oils, but I have noticed nasal irritation when working in a confined space. I'm embarking on my first guitar build soon, a little early since I can't play for toffee, so thanks for all the tutorials you've put out.
YOUR OIL FINISH APEARS TO BE THINNER THAN TRUE OIL WICH I LIKE, I ALWAYS THIN DOWN THE FIRST COUPLE COATS ANYWAY SO IT WILL ABSORB DEEPER INTO THE WOOD, SPECIALLY ON SOFTER WOODS I'VE NOTICED IF YOU DON'T GET GOOD PENETRATION WITH THE FIRST COUPLE PASSES THE BODY WILL DENT AND SCRATCH MUCH EASIER. AWESOME GUITAR, I LOVE THIS VIDEO, YOU ARE RIGHT THERE IS NOTHING BETTER IN A BUILD THEN THE FIRST PASS WITH WHATEVER FINISH YOU ARE USING. ALL OF THE HARD WORK IS FINALLY SHOWN. HA, JUST NOTICED I WATCHED THIS VIDEO A YEAR AGO.
Hello, I must comment on your Shop area, it is very nice, very well put together , everything in it's place, i wish i had a shop like yours, Cheers, Cousin Figel
I would love to get some birdseye maple and use your oil on that, it would look spectacular. The guitars that you had on looked great and with a little wax would last for years and years of use.
Wow. Im a drummer who has done some nice things in my little carreer and i always love the woodfinish. The guitar you are workibg on and show at the end is fucking awesome. What a nice looking finish is that🤘🤘🤘
Questions: Why didn't you plug or close the pickup holes so the oil didn't go in there as it looked messy when it is unevenly dripped into the cavities ? Why didn't you just leave the cover on at the back when oiling the back so you have the same amount of oil on the cover? When you oiled the body, why didn't you tape off the neck connection part as the oil on the neck will also leaving some sort of uneven "stains" or difficulty to polish out at the end?
What are considerations when to apply oil-based / water-based finishes? I wonder about hydrophilic and hydrophobic types of woods and issues about their stability when finishes are applied.
Thanks for creating these amazingly informative vids. After seeing your upgrade of a nasty kit guitar, I'm now INSPIRED to get stuck into a similar project using a £40 guitar off eBay (because I love it's neck) and a nice slab of figured maple. It's frets are shot beyond dressing sadly. Fretwork is the one area that scares me. I'm torn between ripping out the frets and cobbling together or buying some kind of fret press to match the radius, or using a compound radius slotted stewmac board I have acquired and one of those little hammers. Any advice for someone that will probably do a guitar only once? Would Crimson be able to quote for this one aspect of the project?
Really enjoyed this video. Thanks for posting. Question: on the additional coats do you use the same method, with the sandpaper and tissue... or just the tissue?
Thanks for this tutorial, the finish looks fantastic! If I was to use this technique on a straight grained wood instead of a burl would I still be ok to use a circular motion with the wet/dry or would I run with the grain only?
I'd be interested in seeing how it'd finish if you put it in a vacuum chamber covered in oil, draw all the air out and then slowly depressurise the chamber. The oil would replace the air in the wood and go in really deep. Alternatively, straight up pressure treating it instead.
Crazy beautiful piece of wood. I have (sparingly) used a hair dryer on a piece of wood that was sweating oil to help get the excess to the surface. Can you ship your oil to the states?
Here for the oil aspect. Ben is obviously a master at what he does. I wish I could "work" with wood even a 1/10 of the skill level as he has. It's amazing how only after 5 minutes of watching this video, I could tell he has so much talent at what he does. Thanks! I am going to question Elm as a tonewood however!? Burled elm? It looks really heavy IMHO. I don't like the attack of a guitar that is really heavy. I've never played an elm guitar so I did some quick research here. I guess they make chairs out of that! And lovely English tea carts? LOL! It's probably the client's choice? Would a veneer elm top would work as a tonewood since it is really beautiful? Does elm resonate nicely if used in an Archtop design? On another subject, I did like the red hued brownish Stratty guitar - what wood was that? Elm? Peace
Ben , Im a first timer building a spalted maple LP kit ( sorry not from you ) but I did purchased your Crimson was high gloss finishing oil ( it’s on its long journey to the states as I write this ) Can this application also be used here to the spalted top ? The sanding with the 1,200 paper and oil application ? Or should I use the “ standard finish oil “ from Crimson first , or any other ideas ? Willing to purchase whatever and time is not an issue . Just want it right ! Thanks : Great luck with the guitar build off and will buy Crimson raffle tickets and watch your videos religiously and wonder bread ha ! also .
Ben it's a really old video I'm sorry but I have a question : how do you manage when the guitar has been stained before the oil ? just the oil and 1200 sand paper rubes off a lot of pigment on my project...
I just bought the LP kit from Crimson, and also the set of stains, I did buy a bottle of the oil as well. Can you and should you use the oil on a stained body for a high gloss finish? or is it only for natural wood?
If you look to the end of the video, he shows a guitar that was stained an orange/brown color, and he says that the luthier used finishing oil and renaissance wax on top of the stain... so the answer to your question is, apparently, yes.
I doubt that this will be seen- suppose I might have to email- can this be done over the top of your Stunning Stains in lieu of a traditional lacquer? I have just order the stains and the oil (I'm planning on doing a natural back and a coloured front) for my first build. Can I oil the front as well as the back, or will I need to go elsewhere for a nitro spray?
Purchased the High Build oil... have used it on two bodies... excellent product. Working on a 12-coat finish now with this product. The glow is incredible. Well worth the purchase price and following his methods.
Yore are it. You're the guy to come to when I need a real, in-depth lesson from a pro. Thank you for what you do.
You're*
Thanks so much Ben for developing this oil, and for this great tutorial for it! This is the oil that I have been dreaming of finding for years, and my search is finally over now!
This guy's presentation style is genius.
Thank you! B
Ben, you are an absolute inspiration to me, as I (at the tender age of 42) embark on a career in lutherie. I am of course terrified, but steady on. I will look to you often for wisdom.
The bits from 17:36 and onward, where the camera pans across the guitars, is amazing. I like it.
Ben. That finish is absolutely unequivocally stunning.
This oil is amazing ! I have done about 70% of my guitar in this oil including the neck. After 6 months of playing, this is the best feeling neck I have. I think I ended up sanding it with 1200 grit or higher after it cured. The result is silky smooth with some grain texture and this helps slide-ability of the palm. I am literally finishing all my necks in this from now on. Also it is a quite thin viscosity which makes it a dream to apply. Not too stinky either
I really appreciate you coming back and saying this, having unsolicited reviews like this really really helps. Thank you! B
I see there are 2 finishing oils on the website now - which one did you use? (And what’s the difference)
ROFL at 1:27 as Ben says "I have a really nice relationship with a gentleman at a finishing manufacturing company" as he's sliding on his blue rubber gloves like a true proctologist lol
Stephen Palummo ah ah ah ahah
I made a tele and I finished it with the Crimson guitar finish and it looked stunning. Thank you Crimson guitars!
What a beautiful piece of wood! There is nothing more satisfying than applying a finish to something like that. Nice!
That's a truly stunning piece of wood to begin with, then when you start adding oil... Wow, I was almost speechless!
I need to give a thumbs up, and leave a comment, because I've learned so much from this video. It explains why my finishes were less than satisfactory.
Thanks for the awesome video
Man, both those guitars are so beautiful with the oil finish. It's amazing that you get such an amazing finish with just oil. That's a sweet gloss.
Apologies, yesterday this video had audio issues and a complaint about the video quality. This is all fixed now.
We all appreciate your valuable time, effort, and skill... Thank you.
thank you for the re-upload. this oil of yours is very interesting
hello mr.crimson im would ask to you how to do place the pot volume and tone into the guitar body
Rick Baker tgjh v .ñ
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Hey Ben, Love your work and your channel I've been watching since you were in the shed. What you have done with your business and art in such a short period of time is inspiring. I'm a full time Tattooer and part time guitar builder and I have learned a ton from your videos. Thank you for posting them and keep up the good work.
Vous êtes connus et apprécié pour votre travail et vos conseils chez nous en France , merci pour tout se que vous faites et un grand bravo pour votre école 😉
I just ordered a bottle of your finish along with some other tools recently to prepare for my next guitar build. It looks great, so I'm looking forward to giving it try.
That finish is stunning, and I really like the shape!
You might try this oil recipe: 1 part boiled linseed oil, 1 part polyurethane, 1 part vegetable turpentine. Wipe on, wipe off excess and let dry, repeat. Note when you say the oil penetrates, yes it does more than a surface coating but if you cut a profile to inspect the penetration you will see almost no penetration; its less than half a mm. When people say the oil penetrates you get the feeling its goes in quite a few mm but it doesn't. Nice piece of Elm.
Unbelievably beautiful ! Thanks for sharing this wonder of nature with us and all the hard work it took to bring out the best !
I never thought I would say this about another man’s wood, but that is beautiful.
Oh now! Ta. ;) B
I finished my first partscaster with a 1:1 blend of boiled linseed oil and paraffin. American red alder body. 5 coats of oil, left in the hot African sun to soak in, finishing with 1200 grit wet and dry paper. Lovely and warm satin finish. But my application method was very close to what Ben is showing here.
One of my favorite videos.
definitely getting my hands on a bottle of this and the fretboard oil, along with some ren wax for my figured ash & ziricote guitar. I'll be using it as a resume piece for applying to a custom guitar company :D thanks for all the great videos Ben, I know I wouldn't be anywhere near where I am now if it hadn't been for all these tutorials and crazy one off build videos
Wow -- both gorgeous guitar finishes!
Staining or oiling is the luthiers reward for all that sanding!
Watco danish oil also suggests rubbing in their oil with fine grit sandpaper,as you have suggested.They said it also allows the sanding dust from the wood to aid in packing the open pores..Although I do not use Danish oil,it is a great tip.I would like to try your oil in the future.I have used your techniques with gunstock oils and have had very pleasing results.Way back in the 80's I teased Stuart Spector for using oil rather than lacquer.Stu finally relented and gave my shop the contract to finish all the guitars from then on until his selling to Kramer. He asked that we use a using a finish.Now that I look back at this,and see how nice an oiled and rubbed finish can be,I must write Stu an apology.
That guitar is an amazing looking instrument. I've see a couple of the vids on this and it's a beauty.
Do you have a tutorial on applying your water based wipe on lacquer finish? Cant find one anywhere?!
BTW that is one absolutely stunning guitar. Looking forward to seeing its completion!
Absolutely stunning Burr
clicked on this because your guitar looks a lot like my burl maple strat-style guitar.
Great looking guitar!
Thank you.. you have great taste in guitars it seems 😋
I used the oil on the neck of my latest build, this time a canjo, and am incredibly pleased with the results. I shall never use another oil again.
+jpcgordon thank you for your support!
As an amateur luthier, I am usually pretty particular in what I consider a perfect guitar design.
But honestly, there is not ONE thing I don't love about this guitar. I absolutely love this design!! And that wood grain is incredible!
Love the videos! I have some oil on the way, but I was wondering what grain you recommend sanding to before applying the finishing oil?
320 grit. There are full directions on the FAQ page of the shop website. www.crimsonguitars.com/pages/frequently-asked-questions DC
I just bought me a buttload of crimson toys, and I love the behind the scenes action in the emails! Showing me that it's actually a pack of llamas who assemble my stuff, and a fifth army's worth of eagles bringing the goodies from Middle Earth (Europe) to America, where they belong!
stunning work on them . thank you for sharing
Beautiful finish Ben.
Absolutely Beautiful Timber, excellent advice, Thank you.
Melbourne, Australia.
Your finishes are amazing as always. I think I will go back to my guitar body and try the wet dry snadpaper thing.
Thanks for the video, the wood on that guitar body looked sick , ''that means good'', where i come from. After you were finished working on the Body, That Guitar Looks Like a MILLION BUCKS, just awesome, Cousin Figel
Just received my first bottle of oil. really looking forward to using it.
Ben how timely. I just in fact applied my first coat of CG Finishing oil to my home build the other night. Unfortunately it partially dissolved my underlying green dye job and now I am having to reevaluate my gameplan going forward. You previously made the video based on my comments/questions and I took cues from your 12 hour build as to how to proceed but I am an amateur after all. I am now considering a wipe on gel in either green or white which might hopefully salvage the results of my color scheme before I apply the remainder of the coats from my bottle of my CG Finishing Oil and then Renaissance wax. Wish me luck! If it is halfway decent, I'll send you some pictures. Cheers! -Matt B
That is a gorgeous shape!
Wow! Your shop looks as good as your guitar,both super nice, right on 👌
Thank you.. I have a weakness for nice tools and feel that that comes though in the builds a bit? B
I love this oil! 5/5 Will Use again
I wish i could afford a guitar like this one. I cant play for an inch, but this is pure art.
Thanks for fixing the audio issue
Very beautiful! Just a theoretical question. If you do an oil finish and for some reason you change your mind later and you want a Lacquer finish instead. Can you just lacquer over the oil finish?
A Really nice job, Thanks for the video. Very helpful.
Glad it was helpful, thanks for watching!
Great finish Ben. Does your finishing oil have VOCs that should be vented during use? I love finishing oils, but I have noticed nasal irritation when working in a confined space.
I'm embarking on my first guitar build soon, a little early since I can't play for toffee, so thanks for all the tutorials you've put out.
YOUR OIL FINISH APEARS TO BE THINNER THAN TRUE OIL WICH I LIKE, I ALWAYS THIN DOWN THE FIRST COUPLE COATS ANYWAY SO IT WILL ABSORB DEEPER INTO THE WOOD, SPECIALLY ON SOFTER WOODS I'VE NOTICED IF YOU DON'T GET GOOD PENETRATION WITH THE FIRST COUPLE PASSES THE BODY WILL DENT AND SCRATCH MUCH EASIER. AWESOME GUITAR, I LOVE THIS VIDEO, YOU ARE RIGHT THERE IS NOTHING BETTER IN A BUILD THEN THE FIRST PASS WITH WHATEVER FINISH YOU ARE USING. ALL OF THE HARD WORK IS FINALLY SHOWN. HA, JUST NOTICED I WATCHED THIS VIDEO A YEAR AGO.
COOL MAN :)
Hello, I must comment on your Shop area, it is very nice, very well put together , everything in it's place, i wish i had a shop like yours, Cheers, Cousin Figel
I would love to get some birdseye maple and use your oil on that, it would look spectacular. The guitars that you had on looked great and with a little wax would last for years and years of use.
I'd like to do a mandolin in this & do some pyrography on it & then do the oil finish over that...
Gorgeous!
that is the best grain i have ever seen
top video!
subscribed!
Thank you! B
@@CrimsonCustomGuitars ive been hooked on the channel ever since! :)
Wow. Im a drummer who has done some nice things in my little carreer and i always love the woodfinish. The guitar you are workibg on and show at the end is fucking awesome. What a nice looking finish is that🤘🤘🤘
Holly amazing pieces of wood :)
How often do you apply this finish to a neck?
Might be useful to have a dropper/cap thing on that oil bottle. ;)
Ben doesn't do dropper caps! Lol 😂
Questions:
Why didn't you plug or close the pickup holes so the oil didn't go in there as it looked messy when it is unevenly dripped into the cavities ?
Why didn't you just leave the cover on at the back when oiling the back so you have the same amount of oil on the cover?
When you oiled the body, why didn't you tape off the neck connection part as the oil on the neck will also leaving some sort of uneven "stains" or difficulty to polish out at the end?
What are considerations when to apply oil-based / water-based finishes? I wonder about hydrophilic and hydrophobic types of woods and issues about their stability when finishes are applied.
Thanks for creating these amazingly informative vids. After seeing your upgrade of a nasty kit guitar, I'm now
INSPIRED to get stuck into a similar project using a £40 guitar off eBay (because I love it's neck) and a nice slab of figured maple. It's frets are shot beyond dressing sadly. Fretwork is the one area that scares me. I'm torn between ripping out the frets and cobbling together or buying some kind of fret press to match the radius, or using a compound radius slotted stewmac board I have acquired and one of those little hammers. Any advice for someone that will probably do a guitar only once? Would Crimson be able to quote for this one aspect of the project?
Really enjoyed this video. Thanks for posting.
Question: on the additional coats do you use the same method, with the sandpaper and tissue... or just the tissue?
Do you normally finish in a clean room?
Thanks for this tutorial, the finish looks fantastic! If I was to use this technique on a straight grained wood instead of a burl would I still be ok to use a circular motion with the wet/dry or would I run with the grain only?
love that wood
I'd be interested in seeing how it'd finish if you put it in a vacuum chamber covered in oil, draw all the air out and then slowly depressurise the chamber. The oil would replace the air in the wood and go in really deep. Alternatively, straight up pressure treating it instead.
Crazy beautiful piece of wood. I have (sparingly) used a hair dryer on a piece of wood that was sweating oil to help get the excess to the surface.
Can you ship your oil to the states?
I'm sure its already been said....but are you a bald Bill Bailey?
I've only discovered you in the last week but absolutely brilliant videos. Thank you
Beautiful
Can be used for maple fingerboards too ?
Here for the oil aspect. Ben is obviously a master at what he does. I wish I could "work" with wood even a 1/10 of the skill level as he has.
It's amazing how only after 5 minutes of watching this video, I could tell he has so much talent at what he does. Thanks!
I am going to question Elm as a tonewood however!? Burled elm?
It looks really heavy IMHO. I don't like the attack of a guitar that is really heavy.
I've never played an elm guitar so I did some quick research here. I guess they make chairs out of that! And lovely English tea carts? LOL! It's probably the client's choice? Would a veneer elm top would work as a tonewood since it is really beautiful?
Does elm resonate nicely if used in an Archtop design?
On another subject, I did like the red hued brownish Stratty guitar - what wood was that? Elm? Peace
Awesome finish. How long do you wait between coats?
Ben , Im a first timer building a spalted maple LP kit ( sorry not from you ) but I did purchased your Crimson was high gloss finishing oil
( it’s on its long journey to the states as I write this )
Can this application also be used here to the spalted top ? The sanding with the 1,200 paper and oil application ? Or should I use the “ standard finish oil “
from Crimson first , or any other ideas ?
Willing to purchase whatever and time is not an issue . Just want it right !
Thanks : Great luck with the guitar build off and will buy Crimson raffle tickets and watch your videos religiously and wonder bread ha ! also .
Can we use this technic with sanding if we used water base colours?
I’m scared sanding the colours…
I found two quarts of elbow grease, but just can't find any headlight fluid for the puma.... Ugh, I mean warthog.
cyanidejunkie117 Lopez left it in the tank. Oops, I meant Sheila.
Is that oil volatile like linseed oil?
Wow! Awesome guitar. Would your oil work on a Warwick bass with their 'proprietary' wax finish?
Awesome, thank you so much!!
How much oil U needed for all those coats ?? Will one bottle be enough ???
great vid, thancks a lot.
Is an Oil finish nice for a poplar burl top ?
thanck you
Ben it's a really old video I'm sorry but I have a question : how do you manage when the guitar has been stained before the oil ? just the oil and 1200 sand paper rubes off a lot of pigment on my project...
Hi Ben, with the finish this oil gives how do you decide whether to use finishing oil or lacquer on a stained guitar?
Do you not do any grain filling, since the knots and natural character of the wood seem to be very much a part of your brand's aesthetic?
I just bought the LP kit from Crimson, and also the set of stains, I did buy a bottle of the oil as well. Can you and should you use the oil on a stained body for a high gloss finish? or is it only for natural wood?
Could you use lacquer or something similar over the top of that to make a more protective finish whilst keeping the same quality of finish?
Could you do this on stained wood? Or you would end scratching the stain and ruining the colour?
Watch to the end of the video!
I like this body :)
Is the oil ok to use on a headstock veneer without binding ? Awesome videos by the way 👍🏻
G'day Ben, is there a reason why the pickup cavities are not oiled or stained? Cheers.
will this method work with thin veneer tops?
What is the recommended curing time once all applications are complete? Is it wise to leave it a week or so to fully cure?
btw Renaissance wax is good,i recommend dodjuice crush lines of caruba wax for cars its not cheap but tough and shines awesome..
Ben, would you recommend using 1200 grit sandpaper with the oil on a wood that doesn't need to have its grain filled?
Looks amazing on a natural wood finish.
Can the oil be used on top of a coloured dye/stain?
If you look to the end of the video, he shows a guitar that was stained an orange/brown color, and he says that the luthier used finishing oil and renaissance wax on top of the stain... so the answer to your question is, apparently, yes.
I doubt that this will be seen- suppose I might have to email- can this be done over the top of your Stunning Stains in lieu of a traditional lacquer? I have just order the stains and the oil (I'm planning on doing a natural back and a coloured front) for my first build. Can I oil the front as well as the back, or will I need to go elsewhere for a nitro spray?