YAKI
29th April 2007, 03:13 AM
I work for a furniture repair shop in Ottawa, Canada and had a client come in with a request to restore her table leaf that had been damaged by a tipped candle. This is the most destructive burn damage to a table that I have seen to date.
The overall damage is approximately 18" x 12" with the deepest burn depth of 1/2". The veneer is quarter matched cherry on a mdf substrate. The cherry appears to have natural lacquer finish. The inlay surrounding the cherry is a mother-of-pearl imitation. This all adds up to a challenging restoration and finishing project. The attached pictures show the damage.
The repair concept of operations is to clean the damaged area, router out a grave only on the burnt area, insert a new substrate, attempt to match the cherry grain with avaiable veneer and finally strip and refinish the complete cherry portion. The border and inlay will be repaired separetly (we think). There are obviously some time and money limitations which influence the concept of operations.
I will post the progress of work on this project if people are interested? Comments are also very much welcome.
The overall damage is approximately 18" x 12" with the deepest burn depth of 1/2". The veneer is quarter matched cherry on a mdf substrate. The cherry appears to have natural lacquer finish. The inlay surrounding the cherry is a mother-of-pearl imitation. This all adds up to a challenging restoration and finishing project. The attached pictures show the damage.
The repair concept of operations is to clean the damaged area, router out a grave only on the burnt area, insert a new substrate, attempt to match the cherry grain with avaiable veneer and finally strip and refinish the complete cherry portion. The border and inlay will be repaired separetly (we think). There are obviously some time and money limitations which influence the concept of operations.
I will post the progress of work on this project if people are interested? Comments are also very much welcome.