lilon
29th March 2009, 08:28 PM
Hi,
I am trying to restore a 1920-30 queensland maple wardrobe. The outside is maple, all in good condition, the inside is rimmu (N.Z. timber). Here is what I need advice with:
1. The rimmu is wraped in various places. Can I just glue-screw the rebelious parts into place or is the wraping likely to be strong enough to tear the glue-screws? (I know its difficult to answer without pictures but its dark and the wardrobe is outside)
2. The wardrobe is 450mm deep and I want to extend it to 500mm so that we can hang clothes loosly. What's the best way to do it? The wardrobe is not very firm right now so I need to strengthen its structure somehow and I am afraid that extending the depth by gluing-screwing 50X30mm pieces to all four sides (at the back) and still making the frame strong is going to be tricky.
3. I've sanded the maple because I didn't like the glossy varnish (or whatever it was). I want to apply something as matt (non-glossy) as possible but still retain the antique look. What are my options?
How will hard oil (such as Volvox) look? (I must admit that I am not crazy about the looks of maple but the wardrobe itself looks really nice)
How will shelacing look on maple?
Any other suggestions?
thanks very much
I am trying to restore a 1920-30 queensland maple wardrobe. The outside is maple, all in good condition, the inside is rimmu (N.Z. timber). Here is what I need advice with:
1. The rimmu is wraped in various places. Can I just glue-screw the rebelious parts into place or is the wraping likely to be strong enough to tear the glue-screws? (I know its difficult to answer without pictures but its dark and the wardrobe is outside)
2. The wardrobe is 450mm deep and I want to extend it to 500mm so that we can hang clothes loosly. What's the best way to do it? The wardrobe is not very firm right now so I need to strengthen its structure somehow and I am afraid that extending the depth by gluing-screwing 50X30mm pieces to all four sides (at the back) and still making the frame strong is going to be tricky.
3. I've sanded the maple because I didn't like the glossy varnish (or whatever it was). I want to apply something as matt (non-glossy) as possible but still retain the antique look. What are my options?
How will hard oil (such as Volvox) look? (I must admit that I am not crazy about the looks of maple but the wardrobe itself looks really nice)
How will shelacing look on maple?
Any other suggestions?
thanks very much