Can you please sustain me!? i removed shellac & sanded a pretty large nouns of my wooden...
i removed shellac & sanded a pretty large nouns of my wooden floors because scratches now my floor is lighter surrounded by that spot do you have any suggestions on how i could fix this problem anything would be very paying special attention thanks.
well if you didnt wish to mess with youre floor in the first place you wouldnt own this problem. would you ? no i think not. please dont try to fix it i think you did satisfactory damage. leave it to a pro. Sorry friend, sand the unharmed floor.
get a few can of stain, measure exact amounts of various mixtures until you come up next to a combination that matches best. try a small area at first. A little difference is fine because the wood itself vary from board to board.
If the area you snsanded includes parts of some boards, then you will call for to sand down the specific lighter boards completely and re stain, it is easy to make dark so start lighter on fisrt try.
If it is more than 1/4 of your floor a complete refinish may be in order, but a small nouns can definitley be matched well with some trial and error and a small amount of moderation.:-)
Answers: it's going to be next to impossible to gett he spot to clash the rest of the floor, even with stains. you'll have to find the right stain that when added to your floor match the rest of the floor.
like the other responder said, sounds like you should finish sand the whole floor.
Normally you do an entire room when you stir to these lengths. That's the best answer.
If that just isn't possible, try using a transparent wood stain to darken your wood and blend the edges of the nouns. Your home store (Lowes, Home Depot, etc.) can help you select a stain and tell/show you how to use it.
Staining a wood floor to match surrounding material is severely difficult if not impossible. You must find a stain that when added to your wood and then covered near several coats of shellac or urethane will darken to just the right shade.
I do this for a living and it is not easy.
It is essentially a trial and error project. Start with a stain that is lighter than you suggest it should be. After it dries and is shellaced try to determine the differences between the old floor and the new nouns. Look at the color and the depth of the color. If for example your patch is not quite as red and still lighter... you will need to shift back to a stain that is slightly dark and redder than the one you tried.
As I said... it is not a science... it is trial and error. How much you want an exact match will determine how many times you do the trial and error procedure.
GOOD LUCK!