This is our dressing table.
It sits under a flat roof in the bay window. While we were away, the roof leaked and water stood on the top surface for a day or two.
You can see here how the damage follows the edges of things that were standing on it.
We bought the dressing table about 20 years ago. The seller said it was elm, which it might be - they are certainly nice wide boards. From the sort of shop it was, and the fashions of the time, my assumption is that any finish it may have had would have been removed before sale, and a generous coat of Briwax slathered on. Since then it has had very infrequent applications of wax polish.
What's the best way to reduce the visibility of the water damage and get it looking nice again?
My first thoughts are that reviver mixture would probably do the job, though it might be a good idea to go over the top with some turps or meths first, to remove as much as possible of the remaining wax and take off areas where it has been concentrated into a boundary line.
I'd rather not scrape back to wood if I can help it.
Before I blunder into doing that, has anyone had a similar problem and cured it?
I'm pretty sure I have now fixed the leak in the roof!
It sits under a flat roof in the bay window. While we were away, the roof leaked and water stood on the top surface for a day or two.
You can see here how the damage follows the edges of things that were standing on it.
We bought the dressing table about 20 years ago. The seller said it was elm, which it might be - they are certainly nice wide boards. From the sort of shop it was, and the fashions of the time, my assumption is that any finish it may have had would have been removed before sale, and a generous coat of Briwax slathered on. Since then it has had very infrequent applications of wax polish.
What's the best way to reduce the visibility of the water damage and get it looking nice again?
My first thoughts are that reviver mixture would probably do the job, though it might be a good idea to go over the top with some turps or meths first, to remove as much as possible of the remaining wax and take off areas where it has been concentrated into a boundary line.
I'd rather not scrape back to wood if I can help it.
Before I blunder into doing that, has anyone had a similar problem and cured it?
I'm pretty sure I have now fixed the leak in the roof!