Refinishing Old Wood Furniture
Stripping a tired finish without bruising the wood underneath, and deciding when to refinish at all.
Open articleTalreorn collects field notes on assessing, refinishing and protecting solid-wood furniture. The focus is the Canadian setting, where dry winters and humid summers move wood more than most finishes expect.
Joinery, veneer thickness and the existing finish decide what is reversible. A shellac surface and a modern polyurethane surface call for different solvents and different expectations.
Maple, oak, birch and rosewood each sand and absorb finish differently. Knowing the species changes grit choices, drying times and the colour you will end up with.
A finish in Winnipeg or Halifax has to tolerate forced-air heating in January and damp shoulder seasons. Film and penetrating finishes behave differently under that cycle.
Each article walks through one stage of a restoration, with the steps in the order a bench worker actually meets them.
Stripping a tired finish without bruising the wood underneath, and deciding when to refinish at all.
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A grit progression that removes scratches instead of chasing them, plus raising and knocking back the grain.
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Matching oil, wax and film finishes to humidity swings, and the upkeep a finish needs over the year.
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