momopi
Well-known member
For those who are experienced with wood stains & wood work, I need some advice on the following:
1. I need to spot-repair a chest table that sustained damage to the surface from nail polish remover. Since this is a chest, the surface is not "flat" and has many wood and metal pieces. I can sand down the damaged area in a square but will not sand down the entire chest. The color is dark walnut and the wood appears to be "dense" and difficult to retain wood stain.
2. I need advice on how to best match the staining color without resurfacing the chest, and the color needs to match as closely as possible under 2 different lighting conditions: natural sunlight from large window nearby, and indoor fluorescent lamp. That is, the repaired area should color match under both light conditions.
3. Since the damaged area has already been sanded, using patchwork products like Old English oil or Restore-A-Finish is probably no longer the option. Nor do I have a spare piece of matching wood to test on. I've tested both water based and oil based stains on the actual chest and both do not retain sufficient color after 2-3 coats.
I've called professional furniture restoration companies and the ones who are confident enough to work on it under above conditions wanted $500-$700 to perform the spot repair. I suspect that they might use custom paint or wood dye instead of wood stain. The chest itself is worth less than $500 to replace, but it's custom adjusted for uneven floor so that the top will slide and close evenly.
1. I need to spot-repair a chest table that sustained damage to the surface from nail polish remover. Since this is a chest, the surface is not "flat" and has many wood and metal pieces. I can sand down the damaged area in a square but will not sand down the entire chest. The color is dark walnut and the wood appears to be "dense" and difficult to retain wood stain.
2. I need advice on how to best match the staining color without resurfacing the chest, and the color needs to match as closely as possible under 2 different lighting conditions: natural sunlight from large window nearby, and indoor fluorescent lamp. That is, the repaired area should color match under both light conditions.
3. Since the damaged area has already been sanded, using patchwork products like Old English oil or Restore-A-Finish is probably no longer the option. Nor do I have a spare piece of matching wood to test on. I've tested both water based and oil based stains on the actual chest and both do not retain sufficient color after 2-3 coats.
I've called professional furniture restoration companies and the ones who are confident enough to work on it under above conditions wanted $500-$700 to perform the spot repair. I suspect that they might use custom paint or wood dye instead of wood stain. The chest itself is worth less than $500 to replace, but it's custom adjusted for uneven floor so that the top will slide and close evenly.