The repair will be visible but is that what you want?
R
A wood patch would be my choice. But then I'm a wood worker as one of my other hobbies so it wouldn't be a big job for me.
Frankly I'd just leave it alone before I'd smear in any sort of goo/filler of any sort. Such things typically look horrid.
If you want to experiment with a stainable wood filler, they do make them, then do so on some test wood and decide if it's acceptable before you commit a possible case of "stock'icide"![]()
In my shop (Im a pro woodworker) I would colour-match epoxy to the field colour, sand, then detail in the grain with a gouge and a paint stick.
In my shop (Im a pro woodworker) I would colour-match epoxy to the field colour, sand, then detail in the grain with a gouge and a paint stick.
A good way to go ^.
With the caveat that the sheen of finished epoxy will show as a bright spot on all but high gloss finished stocks.
And, the overall colour of the repair will show darker/lighter as the angle of light on it changes.
Nope. The colourant makes the resin go opaque and the plug is in a void....light won't change the tone. As far as gloss? A quick rub with 0000 steel wool will knock the gloss back to matte.
For the poster that asked for colourants: because nothing actually *disolves* in epoxy resin, you need a fine particulate. You can buy gel coat colourants at marine places, or even use poster paint (dry paint powder) or even fabric and analine dyes if they are a fine powder.