Scott_R
14th April 2022, 12:59 AM
I have this old table that's been sitting in a basement for closing in to 30 years. It's been abused a lot--stuff piled on top, creating scrapes, gouges, and indents, and two coastal floods (Hurricane Irene to start, and then the total inundation of Superstorm Sandy).
At some point in the past I must have started a refinishing project, as most of the topside had been sanded down--i.e., the dark brown finish was gone, though probably a good part of the physical damage happened after this. In any case, that probably happened >20 years ago so I don't remember what I'd done.
There is no veneer; this is solid wood, almost 2" thick. In addition to the top, it has two "legs"--in quotes because they're not leg-shaped but solid pieces nearly the width of the table--set about a foot back from either end, with a lower shelf/cross piece just little smaller running between them. Everything is attached by pegs or something similar (I can't quite see them).
I took the table out and sanded the top and rim again, just to see what was possible. I don't know if the remaining stains in the first picture below is from the original stain that seeped in more deeply, or something from years later. I tried steaming out some of the indentations without success; I read that steaming works best if you do it right after the damage, and I'm at least four presidential administrations away from that.
The first picture is an overall shot after that sanding (palm sander, 120 grit). Lots of little indentations.
In the second and third are a closeup of the indentations--small and large. No photo of it, but there's a similar bit of damage on an edge that would need either filling or total reshaping. Third photo also shows a knot.
Fourth photo has a crack, and shows the original stain I'd removed from the top. I wasn't sure if I should address the crack with a bowtie inlay, which I've never done, or CA glue. In that picture and the next you can see a closeup of something also visible in the first shot the hole for the peg (or whatever), which are in turn covered by wood disks. If glue held them in it's long since dried out. I think I'm going to try to clean out the recesses (most discs are already loose) and re-glue the discs. In the last photo, some of the discs are missing entirely, so I was going to cut some doweling to fit.
I'm down to minimal tools at this point, thanks again to Superstorm Sandy. I've picked up a few items since then, as needed, but I have a 5" orbital sander and (not helpfully here) a electric hand planer. I also have a router. All of my handwoodworking tools are gone--I had a demolition/mold remediation company in after Sandy and asked them to set aside all of my tools (I had some beautiful old block planes I was sure i could save) but the idjits saved all the now useless POWER tools (which had sat in saltwater for a couple of days) and threw out (or, more likely, took) the hand tools.
I'm not sure how I want to eventually finish this. I'm not crazy about painting, though that would probably save a lot of headache since I could just fill in all of the knots and other issues without worrying about matching. I don't have experience with epoxy or CA glues, though I probably have some experimentation freedom here.
Anyway, those are the issues/ideas that come to mind; I'm sure I've overlooked some. Any ideas?
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At some point in the past I must have started a refinishing project, as most of the topside had been sanded down--i.e., the dark brown finish was gone, though probably a good part of the physical damage happened after this. In any case, that probably happened >20 years ago so I don't remember what I'd done.
There is no veneer; this is solid wood, almost 2" thick. In addition to the top, it has two "legs"--in quotes because they're not leg-shaped but solid pieces nearly the width of the table--set about a foot back from either end, with a lower shelf/cross piece just little smaller running between them. Everything is attached by pegs or something similar (I can't quite see them).
I took the table out and sanded the top and rim again, just to see what was possible. I don't know if the remaining stains in the first picture below is from the original stain that seeped in more deeply, or something from years later. I tried steaming out some of the indentations without success; I read that steaming works best if you do it right after the damage, and I'm at least four presidential administrations away from that.
The first picture is an overall shot after that sanding (palm sander, 120 grit). Lots of little indentations.
In the second and third are a closeup of the indentations--small and large. No photo of it, but there's a similar bit of damage on an edge that would need either filling or total reshaping. Third photo also shows a knot.
Fourth photo has a crack, and shows the original stain I'd removed from the top. I wasn't sure if I should address the crack with a bowtie inlay, which I've never done, or CA glue. In that picture and the next you can see a closeup of something also visible in the first shot the hole for the peg (or whatever), which are in turn covered by wood disks. If glue held them in it's long since dried out. I think I'm going to try to clean out the recesses (most discs are already loose) and re-glue the discs. In the last photo, some of the discs are missing entirely, so I was going to cut some doweling to fit.
I'm down to minimal tools at this point, thanks again to Superstorm Sandy. I've picked up a few items since then, as needed, but I have a 5" orbital sander and (not helpfully here) a electric hand planer. I also have a router. All of my handwoodworking tools are gone--I had a demolition/mold remediation company in after Sandy and asked them to set aside all of my tools (I had some beautiful old block planes I was sure i could save) but the idjits saved all the now useless POWER tools (which had sat in saltwater for a couple of days) and threw out (or, more likely, took) the hand tools.
I'm not sure how I want to eventually finish this. I'm not crazy about painting, though that would probably save a lot of headache since I could just fill in all of the knots and other issues without worrying about matching. I don't have experience with epoxy or CA glues, though I probably have some experimentation freedom here.
Anyway, those are the issues/ideas that come to mind; I'm sure I've overlooked some. Any ideas?
510113
510114
510115
510116
510117