🎨 Transform your woodwork into a masterpiece with Graystone elegance!
General Finishes Water Based Wood Stain in Graystone offers rich, dark pigments with a water-based, low VOC formula that’s safe and easy to apply by hand or spray. Perfect for indoor wood surfaces, it covers 50-75 sq.ft. per quart and allows custom color mixing for personalized finishes.
Color | Graystone |
Brand | General Finishes |
Surface Recommendation | Wood |
Material | Wood,Stain,Stains |
Model Name | B640-L Quart |
Size | 1 Quart |
Coating Description | Water-based |
Item dimensions L x W x H | 4.5 x 4.5 x 4.88 inches |
Item Weight | 2.2 Pounds |
Coverage | 50-75 sq.ft. |
Opacity | 0.5 inches |
Compatible Material | Wood |
Liquid Volume | 1 Quarts |
Package Information | Can |
Number of Items | 1 |
Manufacturer | General Finishes |
Base Material | Wood |
Unit Count | 32.0 Fl Oz |
Paint Type | Water Based,Oil |
Finish Type | Water Based |
Global Trade Identification Number | 00606016103195 |
UPC | 606016103195 |
Part Number | WQQT |
Item Weight | 2.2 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 4.5 x 4.5 x 4.88 inches |
Country of Origin | USA |
Item model number | B640-L Quart |
Finish | Water Based |
Item Package Quantity | 1 |
Included Components | General Finishes Water Based Wood Stain, 1 Quart, Graystone |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
A**R
Excellent stain at a great price!
For a beginner, this worked well for a home DIY project at an affordable price. It's easy to apply, and the finished product looks great!
T**O
Solid
rich and thick color, not watery at all like the cheaper stuff at box stores
N**.
Great product but color is darker
Thought this would help stain our cherry wood cabinets and online this looked closer to cherry than other types we saw, but it is a darker shade of brown - Just FYI. Great product that went on smoothly and really stains the wood well. Make sure to go in strokes in the same direction.
C**M
Perfect expresso brown
It worked as expected. The color is almost as if a professional did it. This is the best painting for wood. I highly recommend it. It went from light brown to expresso brown and it looks beautiful and shiny.
A**R
Very Forgiving
I used this product on my oak floor, which needed to be stained, because it was very badly marked up. This was my first ever floor refinishing project, so I had no prior experience to draw from, and no idea what to expect. But, I found this stain to be very easy to work with. I found it's best if you thin it with water. 3 parts stain to one part water worked very well. It just keeps it wet longer, so it doesn't dry so fast while you're working with it. I did one entire coat, and then two partial coats, which were mainly to fill in areas where I didn't get enough stain the first time. I just sat on the floor, and applied it with a sponge brush, and then wiped with a lint free rag. If you have lap marks, or you accidentally apply it too thick somewhere, it's very easy to sand off, so it's a good product for amateurs like me who goof up a lot. There was also no odor, and I was extremely happy with the result.
C**H
Solid Wood Floor - Walnut Stain
This review is for anyone researching how this stain will look on solid wood floors.I bought unfinished 5” #2 common red oak because I wanted to finish it myself. I put in the floors, spending countless hours sanding (with a floor buffer, the drywall sander didn’t work very fast), to finally be able to stain with water-based stain and finish with a half & half tung oil from milk paint.I wanted to add a review for someone who is researching this and make some suggestions.I had to have a water-based stain for the tung oil. Tung oil is a natural finish that nourishes it instead of covering it with a plastic layer (ahem polyurethane). I have nothing against polyurethane but if I wanted to walk barefoot on plastic I would have gone with the much easier, much cheaper option of luxury vinyl plank just saying.Actual Walnut was not an option. I did not have enough in my budget for that. I went with the cheap option that being red oak, however I am not overly fond of orange, yellow and red being in my floor. I wanted it to be like a medium to dark-ish brown. Thus the walnut stain. I tested out the stain on a few pieces of my wood floor and decided I liked it. I must say that I didn’t really care if it looked a lot like walnut. I was just wanting a deeper color.When I finally got to where I stained the whole floor, I initially wasn’t sure I liked it. It looked blotchy to me. I was almost to the point where I was going to sand it all off. However, I invited some family members who are known to give me their honest opinions. They told me I was being too particular and that they thought it looked good. I did use 240 grit and sanded lightly on the parts where I thought it was too dark. I am glad they did because it turned out great.Some things I suggest to future diy’ers.1. Thin out the stain with water. This will give you more time between sections of the floor.2. Stain with the grain of the wood from one wall to the other. I did this and it was the right choice.3. DO NOT try to stain the edges first. I did this in the living room and I could see where it overlapped. I tried to both buff it out with more stain and then I sanded it with 240 grit. It did disguise it, but I will forever know. Major regret.4. I suggest using a rag or a paintbrush. I tried using the paint roller for the stain. It did not work well getting into all the holes and cracks. It also did not apply an even coat. I and the person who helped me used a rag after that.5. Remember it looks better with finish. I am using tung oil but the same can be said for polyurethane.All in all I am happy with the result. And it DOES look like walnut after it is has been finished.
A**R
Espresso gf stain water based
It’s a very dark brown/black stain color …best brand for this color is general finishes in my opinion they get the color right every time . If you need a dark brown no orange or red brown this is the one … I don’t like when a brown has mixed colors but that’s just my opinion value is here color wise money well spent no stickiness at all with water based it is pretty durable and I just used one coat because I like dark brown almost black color… for my dining chair seats went on with 2parts water to one part stain for me . I got quart but still have plenty for other projects left kinda expensive but love it easy to use and no surprises with colors thanks to General Finishes .
L**E
It's beyond description (not good)...
I don't know exactly WHAT this stuff is but "water based" wood "stain" it surely is NOT!It's another one of those "sit on top" products which gets all gloopy and miserable to work with.I watched General Finishes' videos ad naseum to ensure I was doing everything PRECISELY accurately as I'd never used THIS particular product before but, hey, it's crazy expensive so it's gotta be good! HA!Here's a hint ... When a manufacturer posts a whole bunch of YouTube videos about their products and every single video is closed to comments it's a pretty good indicator that the comments that they get are NOT positive. 😉Just trying to refinish a bedroom dresser I went through HALF a QUART of this, COUNTLESS bottles of stripper and ENDLESS sheets of sandpaper, probably killed a dozen and a half rags, two EXPENSIVE brushes, and more backbreaking work than it would have taken to build a new darn dresser from scratch...chopping down the oak tree for it with a rubber ax, forming the panels with a plastic spork from a deli, and putting it all together with scotch tape instead of nails, glue, and screws! Would have looked nicer too!I finally bought NEW sanders and this project wore my go to sanders (two of them) out and yet another bottle of stripper, some REAL water based wood stain and am FINALLY working toward completion.One good thing about it. It's a "sit on top" product, NOT a stain, so I didn't have to score the oak down with a lathe to get the stuff off.Beware is all I can say and I was gung ho to make this work. That was about 2 months ago when I got started.
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1 month ago
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