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chris jung June 26th 06 10:24 PM

removing spray paint from furniture
 
Hi,
A few years ago, we picked up a table & four chairs from a yard sale. The
table & chairs are Danish made and I'm guessing from the 1950s. The
previous owner had spray painted it hunter-green and I don't believe she had
sanded it before spray painting it, as I can easily scrap up the green paint
with my finger nail and the original finish looks smooth and intact. I've
scraped a couple of square inches off (an idle habit of mine when I'm
talking on the phone) and the original finish is actually quite attractive.
I'm pretty OK with ID-ing common woods but I haven't figured out this wood
yet - it's close grained, not much figure but with lighter spots - somewhat
like birds eye maple. The wood is red. I don't think it's natural but I
could be wrong. Since the green paint doesn't seem to be strongly bonded to
the original surface, I'm wondering if there is a fairly easy way to peel
it off without damaging the original finish too much.

Thanks for any assistance.

Chris



[email protected] June 27th 06 09:35 AM

removing spray paint from furniture
 
Try www.refinishwizard.com with your question.

On Mon, 26 Jun 2006 21:24:44 GMT, "chris jung"
wrote:

Hi,
A few years ago, we picked up a table & four chairs from a yard sale. The
table & chairs are Danish made and I'm guessing from the 1950s. The
previous owner had spray painted it hunter-green and I don't believe she had
sanded it before spray painting it, as I can easily scrap up the green paint
with my finger nail and the original finish looks smooth and intact. I've
scraped a couple of square inches off (an idle habit of mine when I'm
talking on the phone) and the original finish is actually quite attractive.
I'm pretty OK with ID-ing common woods but I haven't figured out this wood
yet - it's close grained, not much figure but with lighter spots - somewhat
like birds eye maple. The wood is red. I don't think it's natural but I
could be wrong. Since the green paint doesn't seem to be strongly bonded to
the original surface, I'm wondering if there is a fairly easy way to peel
it off without damaging the original finish too much.

Thanks for any assistance.

Chris


Arvid June 27th 06 05:05 PM

removing spray paint from furniture
 
It may be that the paint is loose enough that you can blow most of it off
with a high pressure air hose. If that won't work maybe a trip to a truck
wash where they have high pressure washing wands.
wrote in message
...
Try www.refinishwizard.com with your question.

On Mon, 26 Jun 2006 21:24:44 GMT, "chris jung"
wrote:

Hi,
A few years ago, we picked up a table & four chairs from a yard sale. The
table & chairs are Danish made and I'm guessing from the 1950s. The
previous owner had spray painted it hunter-green and I don't believe she
had
sanded it before spray painting it, as I can easily scrap up the green
paint
with my finger nail and the original finish looks smooth and intact. I've
scraped a couple of square inches off (an idle habit of mine when I'm
talking on the phone) and the original finish is actually quite
attractive.
I'm pretty OK with ID-ing common woods but I haven't figured out this wood
yet - it's close grained, not much figure but with lighter spots -
somewhat
like birds eye maple. The wood is red. I don't think it's natural but I
could be wrong. Since the green paint doesn't seem to be strongly bonded
to
the original surface, I'm wondering if there is a fairly easy way to peel
it off without damaging the original finish too much.

Thanks for any assistance.

Chris





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