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How To Repair Cracked Wood Baseboard

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  1. ane

    Get some sawdust from the floor you lot desire to repair. If you don't take any leftover pieces of matching wood laying effectually your house, you'll have to get to a flooring store and buy a piece of wood to match. (aforementioned species and stain if possible).

  2. 2

    If yous can't find any wood to match, you'll have to "cannibalize" a piece of the existing floor. Pull upward the baseboard and pry up a strip from the edge of the flooring, or alternatively, remove a slice from nether a doorway. Sand the side of the wood nearest the wall where it will be hidden under the baseboard in one case it'south re-laid, or at the border of the strip under the door where it's subconscious by the door jamb.

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  3. three

    Using a belt sander, sand off a cup or two of forest from the piece of woods into a container (or still much you think you lot'll need to make full the cracks). [1]

  4. 4

    Mix the sawdust with some woods mucilage to make a fairly thick paste. [two]

  5. 5

    Using a plastic trowel (or a plastic spatula), lay the sawdust/gum mixture into the cracks. Try to finish off equally smooth as possible. Wipe the patch and adjacent flooring with a damp rag to wipe off any excess. Wipe on a diagonal to avoid pulling filler out of the patch.[3]

  6. 6

    Let the filler dry for a day or ii. [4]

  7. 7

    Sand lightly. If in that location's a huge color difference between the patch and the residue of the floor, you lot might demand to re-stain the patch.Using a very minor artist'southward castor, stain the patch. Permit to dry out for a minute and wipe off. Let the stain set overnight and using another modest creative person'southward brush, cover the patch with a coat of varnish to match the existing flooring.[5]

  8. 8

    If there are a large number of patches on your floor, or there'southward a noticeable difference in level of sheen, you might need to re-varnish the entire floor. [6]

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  • Always wear a face mask and eye protection when using power sanders.

  • Add masking tape to the flooring adjacent to the area to be patched. One time y'all've finished patching, immediately remove the record - don't allow the sawdust & glue mixture dry on the tape.

  • Hardwood flooring is nailed to the sub floor. If you're pulling upwards a slice of woods, you'll have to cutting through the nails to remove a strip. A reciprocating saw with a blade that will cutting through nails is the easiest fashion to cutting through nails. They are power nailed to the sub floor and so there is no way you tin can pull the nails out by mitt. When you reinstall the strip, you'll have to manus nail it dorsum in place.

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Things You lot'll Need

  • belt sander
  • sawdust from your wood floor
  • woods glue
  • plastic trowel (or spatula)
  • modest artist paintbrushes
  • varnish
  • wood stain
  • masking tape
  • reciprocating saw and blades (possibly)

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Source: https://www.wikihow.com/Repair-Cracks-in-Wood-Floors

Posted by: martinezsweeng.blogspot.com

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