Cabin Staining Products

Ellijay Log Home Restoration ContractorLog home exteriors, left unprotected, will break down with water and UV damage. As water gets into the log, bugs are soon to follow. Needless to say, keeping the exterior of your logs sealed will retard this breakdown.

At Bear Creek Log Home Restoration, we primarily use Readyseal and Weatherall products for keeping the exterior of your logs sealed. We have employees certified by Weatherall and Sikkens, leading manufacturers of external coating products, so you can rest assured that our log home restoration contractors are qualified when it comes to protecting your log home.

These manufacturers have rigorous certification programs that recognize individuals that have demonstrated an ongoing commitment to quality products and improving standards within the Log Home Restoration industry. An individual with these certifications will have a good understanding of specifications, product quality and restoration techniques that will help assure a first-class restoration for the consumer.

Bear Creek Log Home Restoration is a Weatherall C.A.P.S. and a Sikkens P3 certified restoration company.



Sansin SDF Staining

Sansin SDF is an environmentally-friendly one-coat finish specially designed for siding, decks
and fences. It is UV resistant, water-repellent, low in VOC’s, and non-flammable with easy soap and water cleanup. With just one application, this unique formula provides a rich and attractive coating that offers lasting protection. Sansin SDF will not crack, peel or blister. Maintenance coats may be applied every two to three years on horizontal surfaces and two to four years on vertical surfaces.Click Here to Download PDF

Sansin ENS Staining

Sansin ENS is an environmentally-friendly highly durable two-coat finish designed for exterior vertical surfaces, furniture, windows and doors. It is exceptionally UV resistant, washable, low in VOC’s, and non-flammable with easy soap and water clean-up. Sansin ENS provides a rich and attractive coating with excellent weather protection and durability. Click Here to Download PDF

Sansin Classic

Ready Seal® is a combination of only the highest quality ingredients. All ingredients used in Ready Seal® work together to penetrate deeply into the wood’s surface and protect it against weathering. Ready Seal® unique formulation includes the following ingredients: Click Here to Download PDF

Sansin NanoTints

Your wood home deserves nothing less than the best. Sansin NanoTints offer the latest in advanced color technology for rich, deep color that enhances the natural beauty of your wood. Now available in our four most popular colors – selected from our range of Naturals – as well as our full palette of over 80 color choices, inspired by the everyday miracles of the natural world. Click Here to Download PDF

 


Maintenance and Restoration of Sikkens Cetol 1 and 23
and Sikkens Log and Siding stain

This article is written to help explain our processes of restoration and maintenance of log homes with the Sikkens Cetol and Log and Siding stains installed on them.

First, let me start by saying that Sikkens makes an excellent selection of stains for exterior and interior wood and log surfaces. Their stain is beautiful, is extremely durable, and is the go to choice for many log home owners and painters.

That being said, I’ve run into a problem very often with Sikkens that I keep having to explain, so I thought I would put it in writing and try to make it a little easier to understand.

Sikkens is a film forming stain, kind of like a transparent paint. Over time, it fails. Failing means that it changes color significantly, or it no longer repels water. At this point, it may give up its hold on the wood and flake off, it may just turn color, or it may still be clinging to the wood, and just not doing its job. Every stain in existence fails; Sikkens is not special or deficient in this regard. I’m not knocking it, just stating a fact.

The problem comes in when people have expectations of maintenance of the Sikkens stain, and it has already gone beyond maintenance where another coat of color or clear will put it back into service, and where another coat will make a bad situation much worse. Sikkens states in their literature that you should expect to get 2-4 years life out of their system on a sunny side of a house, and 3-5 years on a shady side. At this point, maintenance should be performed. Maintenance is cleaning the surface gently with bleach, TSP, and water. After that, another coat of stain or clear coat should be applied to replenish UV absorbers, blockers, resin, and pigment. If the color is ok, the clear should be applied in order not to overly darken the appearance.

The problem is that many people wait 4, 5, or even 6 years before any maintenance is done. The stain moves right on past the maintenance stage, and fails while its on the wall. What does this mean for you the homeowner? If new stain is applied over this failed stain, two things will happen. One, the new stain will look horrible; the failed stain leaves resin in the wood that turns black when the new stain is applied over it. Two, the new stain will fail quickly, since it is applied over failed stain.

Sikkens tech support, at 1-866-Sikkens, will bear this out, and will give you the following test to perform to verify failure of the stain. Clean a spot with a 3 to 1 solution of bleach and water to remove all mold and mildew. Rinse and allow to dry thoroughly. Apply a thin coat of Sikkens Cetol 23 to the cleaned area, and observe if the patch turns dark. If it does, the wall must be stripped of all the old stain per Sikkens instructions, either with sanding, media blasting, or chemical stripping and then sanding.

It is very common for me to be called to a Sikkens coated house for maintenance and then find out that one, two, or three of the walls need to be stripped to bring them up to the manufacturers standard for reapplication of the Sikkens product.

I’m more than willing to do partial strip jobs, using our media blasting system. We can precisely strip only the areas that need it, recoat them, and wash and recoat the rest of the Sikkens that is intact. Thereafter, an annual cleaning will allow us to stay on top of maintenance, applying a clear or stain coat periodically as necessary. You may still have to strip highly exposed walls every so often, but you should get much longer life out of the Sikkens if it is applied correctly to blasted bare walls, washed annually, and maintained properly.

If you want something that is easier to maintain, or a lighter color shade, we can also blast the entire house and switch you to a water based system that works well for us, too.

I hope this article has cleared up some of the misconceptions about the Sikkens product, and encourage you to visit their website at www.nam.sikkens.com to verify everything I have said. Better yet, call them and talk to their great Customer Support at 866-Sikkens.

 


If you are looking for a log home restoration company in the Ellijay, GA area, please call us today at 706-698-BEAR or complete our online request form.