Best Amazon Prime Day deals: Mumsnet favourites

Best Amazon Prime Day deals:
Mumsnet favourites

Shop now

Please or to access all these features

Property/DIY

Join our Property forum for renovation, DIY, and house selling advice.

Protecting a wooden table-top

10 replies

mistressploppy · 06/07/2012 13:20

I bought a nice wooden (oak?) second hand table but it seems to be rather sensitive to marks - if you put anything wet on it it leaves a bleached-out mark. I don't know what kind of finish is on it (if any)

How can I protect it so it's at least vaguely toddler-proof? Or should I just give up and continue to use my wipe-clean table cloth?

OP posts:
imsotired · 06/07/2012 13:21

sorry nothing to add except i read the title as :

how do i protect a wooden leg? :)

mistressploppy · 06/07/2012 13:29

That's easy though - welly Grin

OP posts:
AhsokaTano · 06/07/2012 13:31

We've got a pine table which I scrub every so often with soap and water and an old fashioned brush. It gets rid of child related marks and cleans it up a bit. I'm not sure if you could do this with oak though.

Having said that my oilcloth does also see a fair bit of use!

ProcrastinationAteMyMorning · 06/07/2012 13:36

I have an untreated table (teak but the same applies to oak) and it's far easier to look after than varnished tables I've had. DC are 4 1/2 and 3. It's regularly subject to paint / felt pens / ground in playdoh / grease / spilled drinks / wine marks / coffee cup rings - you name it.

I just scurb it down with a strong solution of washing up liquid and bingo, it's as good as new again. Really stubborn marks get lightly sanded but that's almost never necessary. I oil it lightly very occasionally if it's looking dry and tired. That's it.

amistillsexy · 06/07/2012 13:38

I agree with the others re cleaning, but if you want to build up a protective layer, use beeswax polish (Lord Sheratons is easy to work with) regularly and you will soon have a nice sheen on the surface that rejects marks more easily (although not completely!)

ProcrastinationAteMyMorning · 06/07/2012 13:41

We use a table cloth for meals but just a fabric one. THe oilcloth says in the drawer - it's more of a faff to clean than the table!

Stannwigg · 06/07/2012 13:48

I've got a second hand but (ridiculously) immaculate old teak table, there's not a mark on it. I'm always torn between protecting it from being destroyed by my 2 and 5 year old DCs and letting it live a little, so to speak.

For now I've covered it up with a protective rubbery thing (a bit like the stuff you use under mats to stop from slipping) - think I got it in Lidls - and a cheap wipeable tablecloth off eBay. It handles EVERYTHING, from being bashed with Duplo, stabbed with pencils and all manner of liquid.

I think I'll keep it on for a bit longer yet :o

FishfingersAreOK · 06/07/2012 17:38

Also try a bit of (clean) scrunched up white A4 paper - I have an untreated oak table from M&S and they had to send a man out to look at it as it was damaged on/before delivery. (They replaced - love M&S) - but the furniture/wood expert man said this was one of the best way to "refinish" it. Works a treat.

mistressploppy · 06/07/2012 20:06

What, Fish - you rub it over with a scrunched up bit of paper?

Thanks all - think I might stick with the wipe-clean thingy a bit longer

OP posts:
FishfingersAreOK · 06/07/2012 20:33

Seriously - scrunched up paper - don't know if the same finish as your table but brings mine up a treat. Though with 4 & 6 YO I now have a plastic clothy thing for day to day protection... just to stop me yelling at them all the timm

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread