Strip and brighten for prep. Look at the Restore A Deck Kits for prep. Stain with a penetrating semi-transparent stain. Try Armstrong Clark or Restore...
That means it is a stain, not a sealer. Sealers are clear. If it has color in it, then it is considered a stain. You should use a deck cleaner, and th...
No, there is not a way to lighten what was applied. You would have to remove all and start over if you want a lighter color. If you want to lighten wh...
Sand all wood with 60 grit. After, use a deck cleaner and then a wood brightener. Apply 1 coat of a penetrating deck stain.
Do you realize that sealing wood offers no UV protection? It must have a color if you want UV protection from graying:/p>
You did not fully remove all the gray oxidation. You could go over it one more time with cleaning if you like, or you could sand it all. Staining it a...
No, leave as is. Filler will not work:
If you strip and brighten the wood, it will come all out.
1. Sorry but not sure on this. 2. It is either a water stain or a rust stain. Using a wood brighener may help to remove. 3. Use a Honey colored st...
They should not, but always test the spot first to be certain.
Most likley over-application, but it could be the Flood product itself being the culprit. You cannot "fix" this issue and keep the current stain. You ...
3-4 months for new wood and TWP. Wait until then or Spring. Redo the prep when time to stain. TWP has no problems absorbing when done correctly. One c...
Yes, but you have to let it dry for 48 hours after any prep or rain.
Not seeing that.