Krome10
Established Member
Hi
I have a dining table I want to restore... It was from a pub, and took an age to clean! The top has since been sanded, and the legs - which were painted orange - have had the paint removed and also been sanded back.
The top, I think. is made from old floorboards. Not certain, but either way there's lots of wear, splits, old worm holes, etc. And that's how I like it. So for the top I'm looking more for protection against food, drinks without coasters, and humidity - which can be quite high in the house at times. If whatever we use darkens the wood a little, that would be fine so long as it is not too much.
The legs on the other hand seem more modern wood with little sign of age or character. The wood is very flat and smooth (planed?). I'm not sure if it's possible to get the legs anywhere near to something I would like, but hopefully that's where you guys come in Aside from choosing the right finish, I'm happy to try any techniques that might exist to help rustic-ify them. I want the legs to be darker than the top, but I'm not dead set on one particular tone.
Here's some photos of the table in question. I'll follow up with some examples of tops and legs I'm keen on emulating.
Huge thanks
I have a dining table I want to restore... It was from a pub, and took an age to clean! The top has since been sanded, and the legs - which were painted orange - have had the paint removed and also been sanded back.
The top, I think. is made from old floorboards. Not certain, but either way there's lots of wear, splits, old worm holes, etc. And that's how I like it. So for the top I'm looking more for protection against food, drinks without coasters, and humidity - which can be quite high in the house at times. If whatever we use darkens the wood a little, that would be fine so long as it is not too much.
The legs on the other hand seem more modern wood with little sign of age or character. The wood is very flat and smooth (planed?). I'm not sure if it's possible to get the legs anywhere near to something I would like, but hopefully that's where you guys come in Aside from choosing the right finish, I'm happy to try any techniques that might exist to help rustic-ify them. I want the legs to be darker than the top, but I'm not dead set on one particular tone.
Here's some photos of the table in question. I'll follow up with some examples of tops and legs I'm keen on emulating.
Huge thanks
Last edited: