I have a house built about 1880's and the oak floors were horribly stained and cupped. On top of that, the wood looks like previous owners have rented sanders they didn't know how to use and have made lots of grooves and valleys from the sander. Any contractor has said they would just replace the whole thing - but I don't need that and don't mind the funky old, beat up look. I'm retired with time on my hands and I need the exercise so instead of renting a big machine, I've just been on my hands and knees (with kneepads and respirator mask) and hand held sanders. This also allows me to take my time. I just work on one room at a time and only work on it for a few hours a day -- so I get the exercise and yoga stretches without beating up my back.
This is the last room that I'm working on right now (saved the worst for last) and it has really bad stained areas. There are areas where the wood is beautiful and then big patches of very dark wood that no amount of sanding can get thru. I've tried a few different wood bleaches, including the ones that work by pulling out the iron content from the wood. And if you're scratching your head over that - the working theory I have is that previous owners had dogs that peed and soaked into the wood - the iron in the pee turns rust colored and there are chemicals to pull that rust/iron out of the wood. But it doesn't smell or anything - just very dark - whatever stained it was many, many years ago. And I've given up on trying to bleach it - this is as good as it's going to get.
It's been suggested that I just stain everything dark with wood stain -- but I'm more inclined to just leave these splotches as part of the vintage vibe. Let the new owners replace the floors when/if I sell this house someday. This photo is after rough sanding so it's nice and flat now. Those dark areas don't get any lighter if I keep sanding deeper. After I do the finish sanding, I will apply pure tung oil finish thinned with Orange Oil Solvent. I like better than poly even though it takes a long time to dry and doesn't protect against scratches as well. What do you say about the dark spots? Any suggestions?
This is the last room that I'm working on right now (saved the worst for last) and it has really bad stained areas. There are areas where the wood is beautiful and then big patches of very dark wood that no amount of sanding can get thru. I've tried a few different wood bleaches, including the ones that work by pulling out the iron content from the wood. And if you're scratching your head over that - the working theory I have is that previous owners had dogs that peed and soaked into the wood - the iron in the pee turns rust colored and there are chemicals to pull that rust/iron out of the wood. But it doesn't smell or anything - just very dark - whatever stained it was many, many years ago. And I've given up on trying to bleach it - this is as good as it's going to get.
It's been suggested that I just stain everything dark with wood stain -- but I'm more inclined to just leave these splotches as part of the vintage vibe. Let the new owners replace the floors when/if I sell this house someday. This photo is after rough sanding so it's nice and flat now. Those dark areas don't get any lighter if I keep sanding deeper. After I do the finish sanding, I will apply pure tung oil finish thinned with Orange Oil Solvent. I like better than poly even though it takes a long time to dry and doesn't protect against scratches as well. What do you say about the dark spots? Any suggestions?