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DIY Repair Wooden Furniture That Has Been Chewed By a Pet

Dogs once in a while enjoy a good bite on a bone, a toy or a bit of wood. Unfortunately, that bit of wood is in some cases a seat or table leg. Bite imprints can destroy the look of the furniture and sometimes its basic structure.

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DIY Repair Wooden Furniture That Has Been Chewed By a Pet

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  1. DIY : Repair Wooden Furniture That Has Been Chewed By a Pet

  2. Dogs once in a while enjoy a good bite on a bone, a toy or a bit of wood. Unfortunately, that bit of wood is in some cases a seat or table leg. Bite imprints can destroy the look of the furniture and sometimes its basic structure. You don't need to be a craftsman or an expert repair person to make the furniture look better. Introduction

  3. Step 1: Prep the Damaged Area • "Score" the harmed zone by cutting little bring forth checks askew over the bite marks. Hold the utility blade edge as demonstrated in Image. • Spot veiling tape over the end of the razor sharp edge to make it more agreeable on your fingers. Secure the cutting edge solidly between your thumb and pointer finger, and rub away any frayed edges of wood that stand out from the surface.

  4. Step 2: Apply Filler • Take after the producer's directions for blending the auto-body filler. • Utilize a little blade to blend it altogether (30 seconds) on a paper plate. When you have enough filler covering the bit region, let it dry to the touch, yet don't hold up too long — it ought not totally solidify or it will be hard to cut off the abundance. It doesn't need to be correct; you can sand it down to the last shape.

  5. Step 3: Sand Smooth • Utilize 150-coarseness sandpaper to smooth out the filled territory. Mix the edges where the filler meets the non-harmed territory. Sand a percentage of the non-harmed range too to quill it all together. Switch to the better 220-coarseness sandpaper to complete it up.

  6. Step 4: Fill In the Fine Holes • Use wax fill stick pastels for shading over the highest point of the sanded zone. A percentage of the colored pencil will join itself to the filler and the wood. Utilize thick paper to rub the wax into the little pore gaps or abnormalities. The paper will push the wax in and expel the entrance from the surface in the meantime.

  7. Step 5: Add Color • Blend cocoa tone acrylic paint with somewhat white if necessary to help, and dark on the off chance that you have to obscure the shading. Red, yellow and orange may additionally help accomplish the right wood tone. The main shading you brush on will be the base shading; this ought to be a center tone of the considerable number of hues that make up the completion.

  8. Step 6: Clear Coat • At the point when the acrylic paint is dry, splash two or all the more even layers of clear veneer over the zone. It is ideal to shower in light coats so the polish won't run. A trap to coordinating the sheen is to begin with a sheen that is marginally shinier than you require. After it dries, rub the territory with 000 steel fleece to cut down the sheen to the coveted gleam. Be mindful so as not to rub through the reasonable coat and into the shading layer.

  9. Reference • http://www.strategiesonline.net/repair-furniture-that-has-been-chewed-by-dog • http://www.austinfurniturerepair.org/how-to-repair-wooden-furniture-that-has-been-chewed-by-a-pet • http://www.ehow.com/how_4827329_that-has-been-chewed-dog.html • http://motherhood.modernmom.com/fix-chew-marks-wooden-chairs-7736.html.

  10. ThankYou!!!

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