@mcfly Thanks! As it is a food surface I used Osmo high solid on the top. The underside and legs I used wattco Danish oil as it's inexpensive compared to the osmo.
"The lavish lifestyles of the very #rich – the 1% – attract attention. But the 10% [paid more than about $40,000/yr] are responsible for half of all global emissions, making them key to ending the #climateCrisis."
"Transport, especially #car use, [but also] goods…, such as #furniture and #electronics… are 20-50 times higher for the richest 10%, and make up ≈⅓ emissions in most countries."
Ich bin auf der Suche nach einem Möbelscharnier bzw. ein Teil davon. Es gehört zu einer Tür eines Sideboards von Dieter Rams/Vitseo aus der RZ57-Serie. Leider ist es abgebrochen und daher bin ich auf der Suche nach z.B. einen Shop für solche Originalteile. Kennt jemand der jemanden kennt der …
Restorers were going to toss out this table (preexisting damage from putting boiling hot canned tomatoes on it), so I decided to restore it since we'd like to keep it. Flipped the top over (other side is all water stains and rings). Sanded, filled holes, and treated with boiled linseed oil. #furniture#restoration
If it ever comes up in the future, water and mineral stains in wood can be treated pretty effectively with oxalic acid, as in barkeeper's friend.
Won't do much for burns, but has worked great on pieces that seemed otherwise unsalvagable. Especially with high tannin woods like oak and cherry, which are more susceptible to such staining.
As promised, here is a photo of Boo sitting on her very crinkly paper bag. We’ve moved it a few times, planning to #recycle it. She just moves with it.