Hello AT,
How can I restore the glossy shine on my IKEA GIDEA dining table?? Someone cleaned it with the wrong product :-( I believe it is treated foil.
Thanks! Shiba
(Note: Include a pic of your problem and your question gets posted first.
Email questions and pics with QUESTIONS in subject line to:
editor(at)apartmenttherapy(dot)com)
Link To All Good Questions
Email questions and pics with QUESTIONS in subject line to:
editor(at)apartmenttherapy(dot)com)
Link To All Good Questions




Sorry, but you cannot. Unfortunately, much of what Ikea sells is inexpensive,cheaply-made, disposable furniture.
NOT GREEN.
view MrGreen's profile
Sand it to get a key, then paint with the best quality glossiest paint in the paint store. I'd go for bright pink.
Cheap damaged furniture is so great for customising!
view alice bachini-smith's profile
Well, we can see it's not green. It's white.
view SPHH's profile
is mr. green getting on anyone else's nerves? refinishing a table rather than getting rid of it and buying another one IS green. sheesh.
view elizabeth in AL's profile
elizabeth in AL, it's okay if you're an Ikea fan to the point of furnishing your whole house with it:
http://community.apartmenttherapy.com/com/User/elizabethAL
No need for personal attacks. You seem to be a proponent of green, too. Please keep the boards clean and friendly!
view MrGreen's profile
Light the table on fire in the middle of a redwood forest. Throw some tires in there for good measure. Then go persecute some widows and orphans.
view SomeSteff's profile
i'm sorry - i wansn't meaning to personally attack you. it just seems that a lot of the time it seems to me that you aren't seeing the big picture. excuse me for being negative - you are right.
view elizabeth in AL's profile
it also isn't my place to criticize you for your efforts and opinions.
view elizabeth in AL's profile
First, I doubt whether MrGreen knows if the IKEA table can be refinished. Second, the suggestion that furniture that is inexpensive and cheaply made is not green is specious at best. Third, no one here has suggested throwing the table away.
My fix: a tablecloth.
My second fix: keep the legs and use them with a new top. Send the old top to MrGreen for recycling.
view JefferyK's profile
lay down a fun vintage wallpaper, and then shellac the hell out of it.
view powkang's profile
It's okay, elizabeth in AL, I'll try to keep the big picture in mind. Constructive criticism is always appreciated!
view MrGreen's profile
glad we could be amicable and thanks for keeping me in check!
view elizabeth in AL's profile
Funny, when elizabeth in AL first mentioned it I couldn't help but see her point. Despite MrGreen's counter-attack on Elisabeth's taste, his condescending "NOT GREEN" line is not only arrogant but often indefensible. Too often well-meaning Greenies do miss the big picture, like thinking that burning wood as fuel is "NOT GREEN" or missing the environmental cost of shipping "renewable" bamboo products from Indonesia vs. using plantation timbers from our own backyard. Nonetheless, I am always encouraged by how polite you posters are (the women at least).
view kirk lenard's profile
btw - i had a lavender metal side table that i used as my bedside table - got AWFUL watermarks on it - first, i spray painted it with white, thinking it the water glass wouldn't make marks on it anymore - boy was i wrong. so, i papier mached it and sprayed fixative on it (same stuff you use for charcoal drawings so the dust doesn't get anywhere or smudge). it worked very well as a bedside table, but it is very labor intensive. you could try some cabinet liner and use that. or you could use fixative to spray fabric onto it. i think that would look awesome.
view elizabeth in AL's profile
Here's an option that I can't imagine is green due to the toxic fumes it produces, but it is most definitely glossy:
A thick resin, the kind where you mix the two ingredients together, they have some sort of magical chemical reaction, then you pour it on the surface, spread it out carefully, and let it dry for about a day. My BF uses it in his art, and it is the glossiest surface I've ever come across, but also equally toxic and a bit messy to use. I believe you can get one type at Michaels (yes, the craft store), it is ironically called "Envirotex". But I'm pretty sure you could find it at some other paint stores as well.
view Angie in Montreal's profile
kirk lenard, you criticize me for saying that burning wood is not green:
"Interesting that a person who profiles as "mrgreen" would post the suggestion that burning wood was "not green". Burning wood may not be as green as solar heating the water, but it is greener than most conventional fuel-burning methods for heating water.
http://www.thegreenguide.com/doc/ask/stove
posted by kirk lenard on 2007-06-10 13:35:47
view kirk lenard's profile"
As your own reference points out, it must be an advanced-design combustion system for burning wood to be green. That hot tub uses an open fire and it's made of non-recycled plastic. NOT GREEN.
view MrGreen's profile
MrGreen:
While you certaintly have some valid points, it is incredibly smarmy, and, as kirk said, arrogant and condescending to go around shouting about how 'NOT GREEN.' this or that is. If you wanted to turn more people on to green principles, why not suggest alternatives instead of attacking people (directly or indirectly)?
view Graham's profile
First Option:
http://www.amazon.com/Xerapol-Plexiglas-Acrylic-Universal-Scratch/dp/B000F537GY
Second Option
http://www.jcwhitney.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/Product?storeId=10101&Pr=p_Product.CATENTRY_ID%3A2000758&TID=101&productId=2000758&catalogId=10101
http://www.modernplastics.com/novisplasticpolish.html
Third Option (toxic-but works for durable and shinny resurfacing)
http://www.tapplastics.com/shop/product.php?pid=78&
Forth Option
http://www.janvil.com/plastic_polish.htm
There are so many products out there...try google. ;-)
view simonsays's profile
I come here for suggestions and solutions, not to watch Mr. Green use every article as a political platform.
Refinishing is the best option - a light sand and then a high-gloss paint is perhaps the only clear option. Throwing it out and getting a new table is a bad idea.
There - simple.
view HilversumJim's profile
Shiba
If the surface is not damaged, but just a little dull, you might try using automobile wax (Turtle Wax is one). I used it to restore my old white kitchen counter, and it did the trick, even protecting it from stains. It can be redone every 4-6 months or as needed. Good luck.
view judy in TO's profile