My mom taught me this simple trick several years ago. As a fan of vintage furniture it has come in handy again and again. Like magic, watch as a single walnut covers up the small dings and scrapes in your wooden furniture. We aren't promising miracles here, but with a project this easy it is definitely worth a shot.
What You Need
Ingredients [OR] Materials
dinged up wood furniture
one walnut
Instructions
1. Identify areas of your wooden furniture that are unsightly because they have been bumped or scraped.
2. Get your walnut.
3. Rub the walnut on the damaged area.
4. Watch in amazement as the damaged area begins to darken.
5. Step back and admire your work. Hey, you didn't even break a sweat!
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(Images: Molly Anderson)






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Wait... what? Really??? That looks amazing! Does this work on darker furniture as well, or only lighter stains? And I'm assuming it has to be real wood, correct? Regardless, that's still a cool trick.
At the risk of sounding like an alarmist, I probably would not recommend this due to friends or kids with nut allergies.
We always used shoe polish. As long as it wasn't a large ding, it worked for the most part.
i wonder if my dog licking the rubbed spot would negate the effect....
thats nuts. :)
running home to try this on everything!
WHA? Awesome!
Im going to go NUTS trying this!
Does it work on dark wood? I must know!
Now I know what to do with that bag of walnuts that has taken up residence in my cupboard! Can't wait to go home and try it out! It better work!! ;)
tam-tbag-
I have a vivid picture in mind of my one-year old son gnawing on the legs of an armchair...or a dinner guest who has had one too many, perhaps. You made my day.
Dang, good to know!
Just tried it! My wood was stained dark, but lighter where it was scratches. The walnut helped, but didn't darken all the way. I'm wondering if it will oxidize over time and get darker.
I did it. It worked.
I always loved using my Crayola multicultural markers for this. I would try the colors on a piece of paper and then compare it to the furniture. Now my furniture was usually only the particle board kind but i almost always found something that worked. I think using the furniture oil is the best bet. The markers would soak in a bit more permanently and could be too bright.
This is such a fantastic, not to mention natural tip! I've a few chairs that need some cosmetic repair. It looks like I'll be making a trip to the grocery store today!
What a fantastic tip!!
gee, tam-tbag, if we already have nuts at home, obviously we're not worried about guests licking the furniture to get at their yummy allergens. we'll just poison them directly by putting out a lovely pottery bowl full.
Mayo works to fill in the surface of a table that has slight heat damage.
Use a tibet almond stick. It's 1.99, lasts forever, and won't go rancid (too much walnut oil will make your furniture stinky).
Any tricks for filling in cracks where wood plants have split?
Jentastic- More details on the mayo trick, please!
http://thesweetest3.com/
I've often used my large collection of Chartpak / Design markers to cover dings. Not exactly environmental, I know.
no doubt in my mind that the dogs would gnaw at it, but more worrisome- the chinchilla (that occasionally gets to run loose) would DEVOUR it!
I've always had amazing success with the touch-up markers.
this does totally work, i've done it many times. HOWEVER - be very careful if you're home is prone to ant infestation... i learned that one the hard way!
Wow, this is cool. I'll have to give this a try! Thanks so much.
the allergic to nuts comment cracked me up! But, YES, awesome tip- a must try.
I am in no way affiliated with this company but the BEST thing I've found is by a company called Howard's Naturals. A local woodworker gave me a bottle and I went home and instantly cleaned up all of my furniture. Water-rings (that I'd given up on) in my coffee table, scratches on my nightstand, the legs on my dining room chairs, all looked brand-new.
I don't understand how it works the way it does as it is only a wood "cleaner" but it makes everything beautiful!
http://tinyurl.com/yahq7ea
Again, I am no way affiliated with this company and this is one of the only products I would rant about like this.
While I do sometimes gnaw on the legs of furniture when I'm invited to parties (after 2 drinks!), I was just thinking about how I wouldn't put nuts on any chair backs or handrest areas, due to the allergy concerns. It's nothing I used to think about, but one day I nearly poisoned somebody with a cookie, and I've been more vigilant since.
From Medicinenet: "Allergy to peanuts affects 1.3% of the general population."
While I'm in no way dismissing the severity of allergic reactions, I'll take my chances here and spring for the bag of walnuts.
Not to start a full on allergy debate, but...
... as a mom to a child with an anaphylactic nut allergy, I find rubbing nut oil on furniture a risky idea if you have young children around. Preschools and kindergartens are often nut-free due to the fact that allergic children can have a reaction just from skin contact. You never know when your child will have a playdate with a nut allergic child, so be aware.
A Sharpie is great if you have very dark or black furniture.
this is a great idea!!!!!!
and sure, if you are otherwise keeping a nut-free home, then yeah, don't go buy nuts and rub them on the furniture....................
i use colored pencils.
@RWS: "You never know when your child will have a playdate with a nut allergic child, so be aware."
Presumably you would know, because the parent would tell you so beforehand. Then you just have to remember that you did this.
Sounds like a great idea for the non-nut allergenic. I'm fascinated by the other tricks coming out of the woodwork (ha) too - mayo? Really? What a neat trick! (But not for the egg allergenic, obviously :-)
I have had a bottle of scratch cover for decades. One bottle lasts forever. It comes in three shades, and even works on floors that aren't sealed.
I would be concerned about the walnut oil becoming rancid and smelling, not to mention bugs and allergies.
Nice!
Oftheaprilbirds--
I use Howard Feed N Wax for the same purpose and it is the best. It also smells fantastic. A little goes a long way. We use it on all of our furniture and have had the same bottle for about a year now.
tam-tbag--
I agree that we should be wary of exposing those who may have nut allergies to danger. I didn't mean to make light ... the gnawing image immediately came to mind and I really did chuckle out loud. I'll be more careful in the future and keep in mind that debates are easily launched.
but using george w bush's brain for furniture repair...?
is that ethical?
I bought a "wood pen" at a local furniture store. They come in different colours to match your stain and really do make chips and dents nearly invisible. We have a dark-stained pine dining table and it was looking very ratty, but now looks great.
My grandmother always kept a few walnuts in a Luden's tin in her bedside table just for this purpose. I remember her telling me that her mother had done the same. I know my mom has that same tin, with those same walnuts, in her bedside table - and still uses them for small repairs.
I doubt that there's ever been a problem with rancid oils, but I believe this was used only for small scratches. I doubt anyone would recommend fixing all types of wood dings/scratches/gouges/etc with a walnut. :)
HA! What a great tip!!!
Enjoyed reading all the clever responses too :)
Thanks
I like the natural aspect of this. It only makes sense that the nut of the tree it came from would do the trick. Chemicals aren't good for anyone.
Great tip, however, as previous posters have commented, it would be dangerous it you have guests with a nut allergy.
My husband is deathly allergic to walnuts and pecans (we call them the "widow maker"). A coworker of his once handed out brownies and placed one on the palm of his hand. He immediately felt a burning sensation on the skin and thought "uh oh". Yep, there were chunks of walnuts in it.
I use food grade mineral oil, the type that you can use to condition bamboo cutting boards, to polish away any scratches. It is a miracle - I have found that walnuts don't always work on darker woods and the wood pens can stain if they don't match colors exactly. I use it all over the house to polish cabinets, bannisters, floors (makes it SLICK) but I have yet to find a scratch that it hasn't worked on and it makes the wood come alive.
what helpful tips here, thanks!
tam-tbag...with a family full of nut allergies, smell or touch can cause at least one running for her iEpiPen. So I understand your concern. I do however think it's a cool idea!
I've never heard of using nuts before for this. But used coffee grinds work as well. simply take the moist grinds and wipe them on, let them sit a while and then wipe them back off.
Oooh, I like the coffee grinds idea.
I third the Howard's product recommendations. I, too, have a highly-prized bottle.
Simply Amazing
My daughter's cello teacher recommended this to cover the dings in their cellos.
Inquisitrix:
Mineral oil is a non-drying, penetrating oil, which is perfectly fine on things like cutting boards. It may also be effective on wood where the scratch has penetrated beneath the varnish. The oil will penetrate and 'tone' the wood to a certain extent, much as if you apply water to dry wood, the color tone will change. However, as mineral oil is a non-drying oil, it will, as you say, remain 'slick' and may even eventually bleed out of the wood. For a deep gouge, it even has the possibility of penetrating the wood in the gouge, and then in attempting to bleed out, may cause some of the varnish near the scratch to lose its adhesiveness to the wood, making a small scratch even worse. Bottom line, keep your mineral oil to your cutting boards, not your furniture.
Also, as someone else stated, walnuts work because they are rich in oil, and oil has the ability to tone that dry wood exposed under scratches and scuffs to a color near that of the varnished wood. However, walnut oil does indeed go rancid, as do most other vegetable oils if not properly treated first. This, for example, is why you rub your cutting board with mineral oil (does not go rancid) and NOT with olive oil (quickly goes rancid).
Your best bet is to use something like Howard's Feed n' Wax or Howard's Naturals Wood Conditioner. These make use of oil and wax blends. The (drying) oils penetrate the wood to fill the wood cells and tone the wood, and the wax acts as a sealer to keep that repair in place.
I had friends come over and place a hot container of food on my favorite antique and leave a giant spot of heat damage on it. My grandma said that mayonnaise would draw the moisture out, but I didn't want the cat eating my furniture. So, I used vasoline instead and it worked great! Even got out a few water rings from years ago. I just put it on, left if over night, and buffed it away in the morning.
Great share!! Love the simplicity and naturalness of it!! Who knew?
Have known this for decades; the nut trick. Even a plain old peanut will do the same thing in a pinch. The vaseline for rings; did not know & may try.