Friday, April 18, 2008

Finishing Purpleheart

Just some quick notes for now... this beautiful wood is a little bit tricky to work with. The dust is allergenic, so clean up well and wear gloves when handling the wood.

Purpleheart changes color from a brownish grey to a deep purple color, the depth of color is dependent on the wood, with exposure to light. The culprit responsible for the color change is a water soluable dye that is produced in the wood. By wetting the wood after cutting it, you can bring more of this dye to the surface of the wood and this can have the effect of deepening the color, but only after appropriate exposure to light. After sanding to 220 grit or past this, let the wood sit in sunshine for a day before beginning to apply finish.

Various postings elsewhere on the internet claim that the color change is due to exposure to oxygen or UV light, but neither of these are correct (I've tested in a pure oxygen environment, depleted oxygen environment, and oxygen is a non-factor in the color change). Exposure to a simple 100 watt light bulb overnight is sufficient to change the color of purpleheart, so it's pretty clear that UV is not responsible either. However, UV light will break down the colorant, and the wood will turn brown over time. This color change takes much longer than the change to purple, so consider UV blockers in your finish or just keep it out of direct sunlight and the color should stay stable for a long time.

Don't use waterbase finishes to finish Purpleheart. The colorant that turns purple is highly sensitive to pH, and waterbase finishes are bases. These will cause the wood to turn green. Acids will cause the wood to turn pink, and peroxide will turn the wood yellow. Over time, the dye in the wood will naturally leech back to the surface if there is some humidity in the air and the action of sunlight will reverse most of these color changes somewhat, but a heavy base like sodium hydroxide (which turns the wood near to black) will still have a strong color change in place.

From my own experience, the best finishes for this wood are lacquer (simple and straight forward), and tung oil followed by polyurethane or a suitable varnish. This wood is highly chatoyant and both tung oil and lacquer cause spectacular effects. Shellac is problematic with purpleheart as the alcohol can cause some movement of the dye... the wood in my title image was finished with a tung oil and polyurethane varnish that I mixed myself.

6 comments:

Unknown said...

Thanks for your comments on Bloodwood and Purpleheart finishing. God willing; I'm planning a large table of Bloodwood with Purpleheart inlaid. Without a doubt your statements saved me a lot of problems.

God Bless you and yours

Luthier Novice said...

Do you need to seal the wood prior to lacquering?

Henia said...

Great advice here. Thanks for sharing. Have you tried a Teak oil finish on purpleheart?

Garfo said...

Hello, me a and a friend have build a bass guitar and the top of the instrument was built with purple heart.We have applied a deep coat of Tru-oil throughout the guitar and the purpleheart is taking too much time to settle and cure.All the other woods(maple and mahogany) are dry to touch with exception to purpleheart which is still sticky after 4 days.
Any idea?

Unknown said...

Interesting...well as a 30 year finisher, more so than a woodworker until making guitars the last 10, I have not had the same experience. I use Target waterborne sealer and lacquer and purple heart looks amazing. There are also more UV blockers in my preferred finish as opposed to any oil based one. You have some contradictory statements about the effects of UV light on purple heart and others. If it affects it then it's a factor. If someone is worried about it they should dye the purpleheart purple first before doing a finish and that will help it stay true to color. I have never seen it turn green or anything else. Fyi, when you put it in the sun to get the purple color take it in after the minute it gets the most purple, usually 30 min. After that the UV starts to break the color down slowly so don't leave it all day...good post otherwise thanx

Anonymous said...

Thank you very much. I am starting a project next week with Purpleheart. This was right on point for what I needed to know!