Garden Furnitures
I bought a lovely set of wooden garden table and chairs last year and already they have become very faded and dried out looking. What are my options. Should I varnish them?
Many people leave their lovely garden
chairs etc out there in the wind and rain and forget about them. Others treat
them with the wrong finish resulting in the finish peeling off. Here are a few
simple ideas and tricks to get your furniture looking lovely again.
Firstly, you need to get the wood cleaned
up and its colour restored. If there was a finish applied like an oil or stain
in the past you will need to remove that with something strong like Prepdeck
first. It's fairly easy to use. Sometimes in the course of removing the
previous finish this stuff can darken the wood but you can reverse that with
something like Net-Trol, an environmentally friendly, oxalic based cleaner
brightener. If there was no stain or oil applied before and the wood has simply
faded and become dirty all you will need is the Net-Trol or similar. I've used
it to bring back the original look to faded wood and even fibreglass. It also
works well to remove fading on teak windows or doors after first stripping
varnish off with Nitromors.
Back to your question, (assuming you there
was no previous oil or stains applied) first you must wet the surface
thoroughly and then apply the Net-Trol which can be diluted up to 4:1 ratio
depending on how dirty or faded the wood is.
Leave it for about 20 minutes and then give
it a quick light scrub with a stiff nylon brush. (Follow instructions) Rinse off thoroughly with a hose or better
still a power washer at low to medium pressure. When fully dry, your wood should
be back to how it looked on day one.
You have various options after cleaning. If
you like a nice natural look, you could apply something like Textrol, a clear,
anti-UV penetrating oil that is easy to apply. Just two coats wet on wet one
after the other and you end up with a lovely natural looking matt finish that
will not peel or flake. (Wipe off any excess and do not allow it to pond”.
If you are really fussy, and have lots of
time on your hands, you could apply numerous coats of Deks Olja D1 that
penetrates the wood deeply and leaves a nice, matte finish. This stuff is used
a lot on wooden boats. If you want a highly durable, yet flexible gloss finish,
apply a few coats of Deks Olje D2 after a few coats of D1.
For a completely modern or different look,
you could also use a “stain” of any colour oil based paint, gloss or matte mixed 30% with my old
favourite, all-rounder Owatrol oil as mentioned in this column last week. In
that case a 4:1 wash with Net-Trol will suffice just to clean the surface
before staining. This durable finish would be expected to last up to 6 years
without any peeling or flaking. You can pick up those items at most specialist
paint outlets and timber merchants and boat shops.