Does anyone here have experience of repairing antique panels with the aim of making the repair as invisible as possible?
I've dealt with a blackened panel that has been crudely gouged out in an irregular shaped area of about 4" x 2" gradually filling the area with thin slices of timber and paying particular attention to the grain and finish of the final layer. My next challenge is to deal with a panel (also blackened) that has an irregular section at one side removed (i.e. there is nothing to begin the"rebuilding" on). The faulty area is again about 4" x 2" and the panel thickness just over 3/8ths. Again, the aim is a repair that preservs as much of the remaining panel as possible, is robust and a good match to the orignal grain and surface. I could begin by (labouriously) cutting a narrow slot around the perimeter of the cut-out at the mid-thickness of the panel and that would allow insertion of a thin section followed by rebuilding as in the first case, but can anyone suggest alternatie approaches based on what an experienced restorer would do?
I've dealt with a blackened panel that has been crudely gouged out in an irregular shaped area of about 4" x 2" gradually filling the area with thin slices of timber and paying particular attention to the grain and finish of the final layer. My next challenge is to deal with a panel (also blackened) that has an irregular section at one side removed (i.e. there is nothing to begin the"rebuilding" on). The faulty area is again about 4" x 2" and the panel thickness just over 3/8ths. Again, the aim is a repair that preservs as much of the remaining panel as possible, is robust and a good match to the orignal grain and surface. I could begin by (labouriously) cutting a narrow slot around the perimeter of the cut-out at the mid-thickness of the panel and that would allow insertion of a thin section followed by rebuilding as in the first case, but can anyone suggest alternatie approaches based on what an experienced restorer would do?