How to Clean Wood Furniture
Posted: Thursday, December 14, 2006
by Donna Monday
http://www.best-free-cooking-recipes.com
A room full of beautiful wood furniture brings warmth and elegance to any room, however, it’s inevitable that stains and mishaps will cause damage to your furniture. Maybe you wish to restore wood or wicker furniture to it’s former glory.
Removing water stains on wood furniture – There are two way to remove a water stain from wood furniture. 1) lay a blotter cloth over the spot and run a warm iron over it until the stain is gone. 2) rub lemon oil into the spot, let set overnight, wipe the excess oil off.
Removing alcohol stains on wood furniture – any substance containing alcohol (drinks, medicines, cosmetics) can eat through wood finish quickly. When a spill occurs, grab a cloth and moisten it with lemon oil. Rub the spot with the cloth (if the spot is dry, remove with the same method as you wood a burn on wood).
Hide scratches on dark cherry or mahogany wood furniture – rub spot with a cotton swab dipped in iodine.
Hide scratches on unshellacked maple or light cherry wood furniture – rub spot with a cotton swab dipped in iodine diluted 50% with denatured alcohol.
Darken a scratch on wood furniture – scoop out the meat of a walnut and rub it gently on the scratch. Make sure you rub it directly on top of the scratch.
Remove scratches from oiled finishes on wood furniture – take fine steel wool and dip it into light mineral oil or boiled linseed oil. Rub in the direction of the grain. Let oil soak into wood, then wipe scratch area dry with a clean cloth.
Remove burns on wood furniture – obtain finely powdered pumice stone (check woodworking suppliers) and mix with linseed oil. Take a soft cloth and rub the burn, in the direction of the grain, with the paste. Keep repeating until burn spot disappears. This works best on light burns.
Remove glass rings from wood furniture – rub the rings with a mixture made of mayonnaise and white toothpaste. Wipe dry, then polish entire tabletop.
Remove spilled milk stains on wood furniture – dip a damp cloth in ammonia or silver polish and rub stain area. Wipe dry with clean cloth.
Cleaning leather furniture – wash furniture with a solution of 1/4 cup vinegar and a half cup of water. Next, wash furniture with saddle soap (available at shoe and hardware stores). Lastly, rub furniture briskly with a soft cloth.
Caring for wicker furniture – wicker tends to be dry and can get brittle or split. Place brittle wicker furniture inside a bathtub and drench with water to restore moisture. Keep wicker away from heated areas such as stove, radiator, and fireplace.
Furniture polish tips – 1) polish furniture often with a lint-free cloth moistened lightly with furniture polish. 2) use furniture polish sparingly. It’s the rubbing motion (or elbow grease) that is the real secret to maintaining a great shine.
3) stick with either an oil or wax based furniture polish. Using both on the same piece can cause smudges and blotches. 4) remove wax build up by moistening a soft cloth with synthetic turpentine, mineral spirits or liquid polish, and cleaning entire surface.
Donna Monday
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Top-level comments on this article: (5 total)How do I get packing tape residue off furniture surface without damaging the surface? What products and/or cleaning techniques can be used? Thank you.
I just bought used dining table and I can take my finger nail and scrape of lines of "polish/wax"...don't know for sure what it is...what is an easy way to remove it without hurting the table surface...
I just bought used dining table and I can take my finger nail and scrape of lines of "polish/wax"...don't know for sure what it is...what is an easy way to remove it without hurting the table surface...
I set a mug of tea down on my coffee table and it left a white ring. Do you think I should treat it as a burn or as a water stain?
I just bought an expensive dining table made of dark wood birch. We will use it on a daily basis. Please let me know the best cleaner or best way to clean. Thank you.
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