| This article is written by a pro
of refinishing hardwood floors since I have done
too many to count. Maybe 300 would be a good
guess.
My father was in the business full time (as
well as aluminum windows and doors (which I'll
write another article about that soon) and while
I attended college, and for a short time after, I
worked with him as well as on my own refinishing
hardwood floors.
In fact, I just did my mother-in-law's last
summer and my back still hurts!
Before you even think of starting this DIY
project, you need to be fairly good shape. There
is a lot of bending, kneeling and scraping :(
Ok, you still are here reading so I guess you
are serious :o)
Here are the easy? steps to a beautiful,
shiny hardwood floor:
1. Determine what kind of finish you would
like first. There are a couple choices,
low gloss and high gloss. It's strictly taste as
they both wear the same. I prefer a polyurethane
paint but some like varnishes. I found urethane to be
a durable finish and won't yellow over time.
Look for 'non-yellowing' on the can.
2. Go to your local hardware store that
carries floor sanders, edger sander, pain
scrapers, sandpaper (medium) and the floor paint.
3. Prepare your floor by filling in any
blemishes, depressions, cracks and nail holes.
4. Sweep and then vacuum floor. (at this
point I would hang a plastic sheet over any door
openings if the door has been removed (new
construction etc).
5. Sand main floor being careful to keep
sander going in same direction. Start with a
coarse sandpaper and switch to finer for second
sanding. The first sanding is to get to bare
wood and the second for a finished look.
6. Sand the edges. The trick here is to use a
fairly light touch and rotate the sander in
semi-circle reducing sand marks.
7. Now the fun part. Take your scraper in
scrape the corners and under heaters. Don't
worry about under heaters too much as it won't
be that noticeable.
8. Whew! The hard part is done. Now the fun
part. Sweep and vacuum floor and if you see a
swirl or sanding marks scrape the out.
9. Put the sealer down. Wait at least 2
hours, hand sand the whole floor, vacuum and
apply the urethane. If you don't have air
conditioning, put a fan on the floor to dry it
quicker.
10. I usually waited at least 4-5 hours for
it dry, most of the time overnight. I recommend
at least 2 coats of urethane for a durable, hard
finish.
You're done! Wow not so bad was it?
Oh yeah,
Email me for a chiropractor :o)
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