Remove blue tracing paper from wood?
Hello
Does anyone know how I can get blue tracing paper off the wood?
My friend burned a box for me and used this kind of paper as a template for the drawing, but now I can't get the lines off the blue paper…
Hello
Does anyone know how I can get blue tracing paper off the wood?
My friend burned a box for me and used this kind of paper as a template for the drawing, but now I can't get the lines off the blue paper…
So two pieces of wood that came together.
a kind of glass roller for mixing/rubbing color pigments with oil
Hello At work we have a dresser with a coaster that is almost the same color as the shopping cart chip in the picture on the left. Does anyone know what the color is called or where I can buy the same ones? I'd like to put them on the dresser so that customers and…
Hey everyone, I live in an older building; my floor was installed later and is made of chipboard. Unfortunately, it turns out I have a severe formaldehyde allergy. Is there a way to paint the floor with varnish or something else to reduce the formaldehyde's penetration? Thanks in advance!
This is a challenge! Before you go to the original work piece, you should practice cuts or pieces. Try a plastic eraser that rubs down. A radiator with abrasive material in it can also help, but can also lubricate. Fine grinding paper can be tried if it does not change the surface too much.
From the use of solvents, I advise because I fear that the dye will be mobilized and then produces even worse-looking edges. Here you must practice first on a test surface!
As a last option, probably under damage to the pattern, overburning the lines would be. But then the picture would probably be spoiled.
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Tip for future projects: Press the lines significantly weaker and apply a pencil to thin. Often enough dashed to have the orientation. It is also possible to work with a paper template through which one burns, at least the orientation points which are to be burned in the pattern.