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SteveR

28/07/2004 9:29 PM

Revarnishing?

I managed to leave a wet "j" cloth on a polished table top with a bit of
pressure on it. It dried out, and when I removed it, it lifted the
finish down almost to bare wood. It is more than just polish - there's
some dark-tone varnish under the polish - and polishing it hasn't
restored the finish.

I don't want to strip the finish off the entire table, as there's a
"gold" coloured strip around the table near the edge, under the finish.
I don't know whether it's inlayed into the wood, or if it's part of the
finish, and I don't want to find out.

Can anyone recommend a good way to restore the finish? My current
thought is to treat it like retouching a car's body panel around a rust
spot - strip the affected area, and feather the strippage into the
"good" surface, then colour-match the varnish, sand the overlap between
old and new, and re-polish. Does this sound reasonable, and is there a
better way.

If you want to recommend products, please bear in mind that I am in the
UK.

--
SteveR
(throw away the dustbin, send to stever@... instead)


This topic has 2 replies

Bp

"Baron"

in reply to SteveR on 28/07/2004 9:29 PM

31/07/2004 2:46 PM

I'm not familiar with what a "j" cloth is but spot finishing is an art
unto itself. You've got the right idea about the repair schedule but there
are two very important points.

1. If you truly have varnish, you will need to repair it with something
other than varnish. Varnish adheres by a mechanical hold, it does not bite
or burn into previous coats. Water base may work but there is a major issue
of silicone contamination from furniture polishes.

2. The color is probably in a base stain and various toned clear coats.
Matching takes quite a bit of experience.

Good Luck.

"SteveR" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I managed to leave a wet "j" cloth on a polished table top with a bit of
> pressure on it. It dried out, and when I removed it, it lifted the
> finish down almost to bare wood. It is more than just polish - there's
> some dark-tone varnish under the polish - and polishing it hasn't
> restored the finish.
>
> I don't want to strip the finish off the entire table, as there's a
> "gold" coloured strip around the table near the edge, under the finish.
> I don't know whether it's inlayed into the wood, or if it's part of the
> finish, and I don't want to find out.
>
> Can anyone recommend a good way to restore the finish? My current
> thought is to treat it like retouching a car's body panel around a rust
> spot - strip the affected area, and feather the strippage into the
> "good" surface, then colour-match the varnish, sand the overlap between
> old and new, and re-polish. Does this sound reasonable, and is there a
> better way.
>
> If you want to recommend products, please bear in mind that I am in the
> UK.
>
> --
> SteveR
> (throw away the dustbin, send to stever@... instead)

nn

in reply to SteveR on 28/07/2004 9:29 PM

29/07/2004 12:16 PM

Try www.homesteadfinishing.com forum for 'refinishing' or a name close
to that.

On Wed, 28 Jul 2004 21:29:41 +0100, SteveR
<[email protected]> wrote:

>I managed to leave a wet "j" cloth on a polished table top with a bit of
>pressure on it. It dried out, and when I removed it, it lifted the
>finish down almost to bare wood. It is more than just polish - there's
>some dark-tone varnish under the polish - and polishing it hasn't
>restored the finish.
>
>I don't want to strip the finish off the entire table, as there's a
>"gold" coloured strip around the table near the edge, under the finish.
>I don't know whether it's inlayed into the wood, or if it's part of the
>finish, and I don't want to find out.
>
>Can anyone recommend a good way to restore the finish? My current
>thought is to treat it like retouching a car's body panel around a rust
>spot - strip the affected area, and feather the strippage into the
>"good" surface, then colour-match the varnish, sand the overlap between
>old and new, and re-polish. Does this sound reasonable, and is there a
>better way.
>
>If you want to recommend products, please bear in mind that I am in the
>UK.


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