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I see what you're trying to achieve but not sure I understand the logic so here's my 2 cents. First, I think dying it would bring out the grain more, like staining does, and that is what you're trying to avoid. Wouldn't the birch grain show up more if stained? I don't think dye would give you any better contrast pre-applied and then burned. I've been wrong too many times to claim this as fact though so I'm open to correction.Depending on the depth of the burns I would think painting it, then powdering the mortar, then touching up the surface of the original paint would look awesome and the coat of paint strengthens the bricks. If you look at his painted one you'll see where bricks have flaked off. This is realistic if it only shows sporadically. But you'd be amazed how fragile lasered wood bricks are. Paint will help "glue" them in place.
Would the grain show up more if stained? Who knows,it's just a suggestion...But it's certainly worth a shot when all you're talking about is a 50 cent dowel,and a few minutes of laser time to find out..Could look fantastic,could be garbage..What's to loose?
...It's not my circus and not my monkeys (sorry Kiz)....
It's not my circus and not my monkeys (sorry Kiz). My message was really geared towards David. But I probably didn't tell him anything he didn't already know so my apologies for jumping in.
As a laser owner/operator what I know I can lose are expensive mirrors and lenses if something is painted before burning. Since this isn't my project I will lose nothing. My concerns were simply for this gentleman's laser. Staining it will not hurt the lenses while burning. Finding just the right color of dye to make everyone happy and then dying every dowel before lasering would be very time consuming and tedious when all you want to do is to move onto the next project.It's not my circus and not my monkeys (sorry Kiz). My message was really geared towards David. But I probably didn't tell him anything he didn't already know so my apologies for jumping in.
Okay..I understand the paint problem,so I came up with another suggestion.Dye is just color,shouldn't harm anything,now,it's going to be too hard to find the right color,and keep everybody happy...Seems you just don't want to try anything,it's too hard.Why bother trying to give anybody ideas,it's just not gonna work...
Lou, for starters, dye will tend to enhance the wood grain--it will act just like stain, and it's already been established that enhancing the grain is not a desired result. But as to the other points, it does no good to put down a professional laser artist because she doesn't want to try something she knows will not produce good results. Sorry if it sounds as if nobody wants to try your ideas, but not all ideas will work, and in this case somebody else has already tried them and found they do not produce good results.Honestly, I don't get what the problem is with painting the chimney after it's lasered. A good-quality paint will not obscure detail, but it will indeed hide the wood grain. And any number of tricks can be used to bring out the mortar lines, including chalks.An overriding consideration to all of this, however, is that the majority of industrial chimneys are tapered. Some are cylindrical, yes, but the vast majority of round ones are not. In the larger picture, round chimneys are among a number of other prevalent shapes, such as square, hexagonal, octagonal, etc., and again, the majority of these are tapered, often with flares or other decorative features at the top. Just something to think about along the way from Point A to B.
Wow, TRW members are no longer allowed to give opinions when they feel that some idea is not going to work? I've voiced my doubts about many ideas posted on TRW and I don't recall anybody jumping on me like this. I think that it is really up to David to decide which methods he will use.
...Seems you just don't want to try anything,it's too hard....
I still think that using wood for representing non-wood surfaces is not optimal. The wood-grain and "fuzz" increase the number of steps involved to obfuscate the fact that the brick is made from wood.
...the potential for stone effects. I feel as if we'd only just scratched the surface.
To me, acrylic provides a far greater degree of control--not only for etching very precise mortar lines, but also surface textures. Like everything else, real brick exhibits a wide range of surface texture: some has a fairly high degree of roughness, whereas other types of brick are quite smooth. The roughness can be reproduced on the acrylic by rastering techniques, while a coat of flat paint on clean acrylic very nicely simulates smoother brick. But we can also simulate with a high degree of accuracy the surface texture of brownstone, cinder block, rough-cut granite and many others, as well as vary surface depth for greater three-dimensionality, all on a single piece of acrylic.
...it's not that easy to make more precise, smooth brickwork that's also found on many urban buildings.
I think I am wired to find wood more 'believable' when used to represent stone...
I know what you meaning by 'fuzz', that is exactly what makes it look realistic to me...
But surely you've seen the stone, rock, and mortar effects obtained on wood and laserboard...
Bottom line: I'm a wood guy. I don't think everyone should be, but for a wood guy, I am excited about being able to do wood brick smoke stacks! Whew!