My mother can no longer live in her house, so among a great many other things (sigh) I've had to sort out her furniture and determine what to keep/what to sell/what to junk.
Anyway, I ended up keeping really nice but ancient dresser and chest of drawers that I'm going to swap out for the cheap particleboard dresser and chest of drawers that I've been using for the past 40 years or so. They weren't up to much when they were new and after 40 years they're starting to fall apart a bit anyway. I guess I got my money's worth out of them, though.
The old pieces needed some maintenance and the finish is beat up a bit. After getting the drawers back together properly and tightening some joints, it was time to tackle the ancient "immovable" dust and the finish.
After a bit of Internet research I found some magical stuff, which is the point of this post.
Old English Oil.
If you have any old and dusty looking finished wood furniture or wall panelling or whatever, this stuff cleans it up, removes any old wax or dirt or crud, shines it up and makes it into a whole new piece. I'm frankly amazed at how good the result from that stuff is. It's not hard to apply; you just have to remember to rub in the direction of the grain all the time. No circular or cross grain rubbing. The only downside is the smell. It has a strong "fake lemon" odour that I find quite disagreeable, but it (thankfully) dissipates within a couple of hours.
Over the past two days I've put two coats of this oil on my "new" furniture now and it's looking great. Much better than the grubby old stuff that I carried in here a few days ago.
Anyway, I ended up keeping really nice but ancient dresser and chest of drawers that I'm going to swap out for the cheap particleboard dresser and chest of drawers that I've been using for the past 40 years or so. They weren't up to much when they were new and after 40 years they're starting to fall apart a bit anyway. I guess I got my money's worth out of them, though.
The old pieces needed some maintenance and the finish is beat up a bit. After getting the drawers back together properly and tightening some joints, it was time to tackle the ancient "immovable" dust and the finish.
After a bit of Internet research I found some magical stuff, which is the point of this post.
Old English Oil.
If you have any old and dusty looking finished wood furniture or wall panelling or whatever, this stuff cleans it up, removes any old wax or dirt or crud, shines it up and makes it into a whole new piece. I'm frankly amazed at how good the result from that stuff is. It's not hard to apply; you just have to remember to rub in the direction of the grain all the time. No circular or cross grain rubbing. The only downside is the smell. It has a strong "fake lemon" odour that I find quite disagreeable, but it (thankfully) dissipates within a couple of hours.
Over the past two days I've put two coats of this oil on my "new" furniture now and it's looking great. Much better than the grubby old stuff that I carried in here a few days ago.
Comment