Well I uploaded the pictures this morning so here they are.
I wish I had taken a pre-refinishing picture (duh!) but the mood to refinish struck me so suddenly that I was already halfway through sanding when I thought of it.
The second picture is after the second coat of stain. It looks like a nice color here, but was really quite noticeably lighter. I haven't taken a finished photo yet as I was so frustrated after the botched finish. Maybe I'll just choose to remember the second photo alone. Even there you can still see some water rings (man, those things are nearly impossible to get rid of!).
A guy with zero do-it-yourself experience learning to keep the four walls standing....and not hurt himself in the process.
Showing posts with label stain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stain. Show all posts
Monday, July 23, 2012
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Let me get you a coaster for that...
After this weekend, I'm almost ready for the week!
I started off by suddenly deciding Friday morning that I wanted to refinish our aging coffee table. It was a $40 Craigslist find in St. Louis, but it has served us well and I figure I won't feel too bad if the refinish doesn't turn out that great. Well, as with most things, i've found out recently, there is definitely a learning curve.
The first part was fun; I enjoyed sanding the heck out the table. Sometimes it's very nice to have a rather mundane physical task to perform to free up the rest of your mind, much like the way I play minesweeper while watching lectures online (seriously, I retain information waaaay better). Started with 120 grit and worked up all the way to 220. The table was gorgeous at this point, the wood looked nice and fresh, no scratches or anything and man, after the fine sandpapering...it feels amazing!
The second part, however, was a bit more challenging. We were trying to re-stain it to the original dark mahogany color it had been. The first two coats of stain went fine, I applied the stain and then wiped off the excess to even the color out. But I was still so far from the dark color that I wanted that on the third round I decided to leave a bit more of the stain on and not wipe back off 90% of it. Bad move. Haste makes waste. Slow and steady wins the race. Whatever idiom you'd prefer.
I got about halfway through the coat with pretty even results, but then got an area that was a little too dark. I tried to even it out with the brush but no luck. And the more I tried, the worse it looked. By this point I decided I should cut my losses and try to wipe off the stain like I had previously done.... except by now it was starting to dry. ARghhh... And then some would come off but not all. When I thought things couldn't get worse, the rag I was using was getting too sticky and not easy to use so I grabbed an old t-shirt...a white t-shirt. I figure it should be relatively lint free being so old. Nice try.
This is why people buy coasters.
I'll have to post tomorrow about the painting (which went considerably better).
I started off by suddenly deciding Friday morning that I wanted to refinish our aging coffee table. It was a $40 Craigslist find in St. Louis, but it has served us well and I figure I won't feel too bad if the refinish doesn't turn out that great. Well, as with most things, i've found out recently, there is definitely a learning curve.
The first part was fun; I enjoyed sanding the heck out the table. Sometimes it's very nice to have a rather mundane physical task to perform to free up the rest of your mind, much like the way I play minesweeper while watching lectures online (seriously, I retain information waaaay better). Started with 120 grit and worked up all the way to 220. The table was gorgeous at this point, the wood looked nice and fresh, no scratches or anything and man, after the fine sandpapering...it feels amazing!
The second part, however, was a bit more challenging. We were trying to re-stain it to the original dark mahogany color it had been. The first two coats of stain went fine, I applied the stain and then wiped off the excess to even the color out. But I was still so far from the dark color that I wanted that on the third round I decided to leave a bit more of the stain on and not wipe back off 90% of it. Bad move. Haste makes waste. Slow and steady wins the race. Whatever idiom you'd prefer.
I got about halfway through the coat with pretty even results, but then got an area that was a little too dark. I tried to even it out with the brush but no luck. And the more I tried, the worse it looked. By this point I decided I should cut my losses and try to wipe off the stain like I had previously done.... except by now it was starting to dry. ARghhh... And then some would come off but not all. When I thought things couldn't get worse, the rag I was using was getting too sticky and not easy to use so I grabbed an old t-shirt...a white t-shirt. I figure it should be relatively lint free being so old. Nice try.
This is why people buy coasters.
I'll have to post tomorrow about the painting (which went considerably better).
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)