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Kalmia

05/06/2012 12:47 PM

Wooden bowl with saran 'bonded' to it - help!!

Don't ask me how it happened, but I lined a walnut bowl with saran to
protect it from something, and the saran 'melted' onto the bowl. What
can I use to remove it?
I am no good at sanding etc, so that would have to go to a pro if
that's the only solution.
Thanks.


This topic has 5 replies

ww

whit3rd

in reply to Kalmia on 05/06/2012 12:47 PM

07/06/2012 12:15 AM

On Tuesday, June 5, 2012 12:47:04 PM UTC-7, Kalmia wrote:
> Don't ask me how it happened, but I lined a walnut bowl with saran to
> protect it from something, and the saran 'melted' onto the bowl.

Polyethylene doesn't really dissolve in anything at room temperature, but you
could paint the bowl with mineral oil (edible kind, like for a laxative) and
hold it under a heat lamp, that will take polyethylene off. Shouldn't hurt
the wood. I hope.

c

in reply to Kalmia on 05/06/2012 12:47 PM

05/06/2012 10:40 PM

On Tue, 05 Jun 2012 16:09:36 -0500, "Dr. Deb" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Kalmia wrote:
>
>> Don't ask me how it happened, but I lined a walnut bowl with saran to
>> protect it from something, and the saran 'melted' onto the bowl. What
>> can I use to remove it?
>> I am no good at sanding etc, so that would have to go to a pro if
>> that's the only solution.
>> Thanks.
>
>
>Of course, that is assuming you can rechuck it. If you do not feel
>right/comfortable rechucking and just peeling the topmost layer of wood off
>the bowl, try power sanding and refinishing.
>
>Deb
Why not just find out what the solvent is for the "saran" in question
and wash it off? The OP DID say they are no good at sanding.

DD

"Dr. Deb"

in reply to Kalmia on 05/06/2012 12:47 PM

05/06/2012 4:09 PM

Kalmia wrote:

> Don't ask me how it happened, but I lined a walnut bowl with saran to
> protect it from something, and the saran 'melted' onto the bowl. What
> can I use to remove it?
> I am no good at sanding etc, so that would have to go to a pro if
> that's the only solution.
> Thanks.


Of course, that is assuming you can rechuck it. If you do not feel
right/comfortable rechucking and just peeling the topmost layer of wood off
the bowl, try power sanding and refinishing.

Deb

DM

Doug Miller

in reply to Kalmia on 05/06/2012 12:47 PM

06/06/2012 11:49 AM

[email protected] wrote in news:[email protected]:

> On Tue, 05 Jun 2012 16:09:36 -0500, "Dr. Deb" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>Kalmia wrote:
>>
>>> Don't ask me how it happened, but I lined a walnut bowl with saran to
>>> protect it from something, and the saran 'melted' onto the bowl. What
>>> can I use to remove it?
>>> I am no good at sanding etc, so that would have to go to a pro if
>>> that's the only solution.
>>> Thanks.
>>
>>
>>Of course, that is assuming you can rechuck it. If you do not feel
>>right/comfortable rechucking and just peeling the topmost layer of wood off
>>the bowl, try power sanding and refinishing.
>>
>>Deb
> Why not just find out what the solvent is for the "saran" in question
> and wash it off?

Good luck with that -- the OP probably means Saran Wrap, or its generic equivalent, which
is made from polyethylene. Mechanical removal is probably the only option. I think I'd use a
card scraper with a convex edge.

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to Kalmia on 05/06/2012 12:47 PM

05/06/2012 1:47 PM

On Tue, 5 Jun 2012 12:47:04 -0700 (PDT), Kalmia
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Don't ask me how it happened, but I lined a walnut bowl with saran to
>protect it from something, and the saran 'melted' onto the bowl. What
>can I use to remove it?
>I am no good at sanding etc, so that would have to go to a pro if
>that's the only solution.

Mount in on the lathe and take a shallow cut. The plastic is likely
melted into the pores of the wood, so it will have to be removed.

--
Silence is more musical than any song.
-- Christina Rossetti


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