doug hodder wrote:Sam...it's worked for me...I've got like a couple hundred of them in the deck on a boat that I built...in the meantime...just leave a cutting board on the counter top, or a strategically placed bottle of beer!!! doug
Larwyn wrote:doug hodder wrote:Sam...it's worked for me...I've got like a couple hundred of them in the deck on a boat that I built...in the meantime...just leave a cutting board on the counter top, or a strategically placed bottle of beer!!! doug
Not just any beer, use Guinness, it's dark, will hide anything, if you have enough, you can even move the bottle and not notice..........
Sam I am wrote:I stained my countertop with acrylic stain, and the places where I used wood filler to cover screws didn't take the stain. The filler (Elmer's) is supposed to be stainable, it says. Any ideas on how I can fix this, short of sanding down the whole counter and starting over?
Sam I am wrote:Wow, what a wealth of good ideas! This forum is great for advice! I showed my wife the spots on the counter, and told her some of the ideas you guys had. She said "could you use shoe polish?" Hmm, I never thought of that! I found some ancient brown paste type polish and tried dabbing a little on the light spots. After several cycles of dab, wipe, sand off, try again, it came out useable, but not perfect. Good enough for now. I think I will overlay it with some veneer or thin ply later.
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