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Removing Stains from Wood Floors Video Tip

Summary: You can use various methods to remove stains on wood floors. For water stains, use toothpaste, fine grade steel wool, or sandpaper to rub it out, then recoat the area with wax. For other stains, use bleach, ammonia, or other methods to buff out stains. Finish cleaning by waxing your floor to restore its original shine.

Wooden flooring is truly beautiful in its understated elegance. It can be your possession of pride for many generations to come. You must, however, be careful that the floor remains in pristine shape, free of stains. Once stains start to set in, they can cause long-term damage to the wood's finish. Fortunately, there are many easy corrective measures that allow you to remove stains from wood flooring without spending money on the whole refinishing process.

The solutions or solvents for removing stains from wood flooring should be chosen with utmost caution, as chemicals are generally harmful for wood finish. Before trying any measure for the first time, test it first on a hidden corner of your home to be sure it does not injure the flooring in any way. You should be patient in trying these procedures, since they demand slow but deliberate rubbing over a long stretch of time.

Water Stains, White Spots

One of the most common problems with wood flooring is the watermark. These watermarks often go unnoticed for days, and when they are discovered, the ghastly stain is usually already implanted on your lovely wood flooring.

A very easy solution is to rub the affected area with some toothpaste in a circular motion with a clean wet cloth. After the stain has disappeared, wipe out the toothpaste with the help of another damp cloth.

For more stubborn or older marks, rub the area with a fine grade (000 grade) steel wool. Then recoat the area with wax.

Another process involves sanding the area with light sandpaper and then cleaning it using mineral spirits or a wood floor cleaner and fine grade steel wool followed by a routine waxing of the floor.

Cigarette Burn Marks

The flipping of cigarette butts by the careless smokers results in long term damage to your expensive flooring. To remove this burn stain, apply a paste of linseed oil and rottenstone on the area with burn marks and rub lightly until the stain disappears. Next, clean the area with a clean piece of cloth and polish it.

Chewing Gum, Crayon, Candle Wax

Wax build up or thrown out chewing gum leaves nasty marks on the floor. To deal with this problem, compress the area with ice until the deposit is hard enough to be scraped off. You can also use wood floor equipment specially made for stripping wax. Rubbing with odorless mineral spirits also helps in stripping off candle wax and chewing gum residue from the floor. Clear the remnants with steel wool and buff the floor as usual.

To remove the crayon stains, place a blotter on the area and hard press a hot iron over the blotter.

Dried Milk, Liquor

Beverages are the most frequent things to spill and spoil the looks of your floor. Milk and alcohol are the most destructive among them. Dampen a cloth with ammonia and gently rub the affected areas. After allowing the spot to dry, apply some wax with your fingertip and polish the spot.

Oil Stains

For oil stains, first blot up as much oil as possible with tissue paper or newspaper. Dip a piece of cloth in dry-cleaning fluid and allow it to stand on the stain for five minutes. Using a dry cloth, wipe the area dry and then again wipe the area with detergent mixed with water.

Mold Stains

If water is allowed to stand on the surface for too long, it will invite mold growth. Use a metal or wood scraper to scrape off the surface layer of molds. For the most stubborn spots you can use very small amount of diluted Clorox bleach. Using light sandpaper, rub the area gently and then polish the area with a wax paste.

You can find a video for this tip by visiting this tip: Removing Stains from Wood Floors - Video

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Get Your Home Clean and Organized! Great overview, ideas, and techniques for cleaning all areas of your home. Special sections focus on your kitchen, bathroom, bedrooms, and family room. Check out Top Twenty-Five Tips for Cleaning and Organizing Your Home today!

 
 

Comments for this tip:

Lee    14 Sep 2009, 09:27
Dear F.R.Eisele,

I would suggest taking a look at the article entitiled "Ammonia Stains". It can be found at:
http://cleaning.tips.net/Pages/T007145_Ammonia_Stains.html.

In this article is some information about dealing with wood that has been stained with ammonia. Hope it helps!
F.R.Eisele    12 Sep 2009, 16:37
How does one remove ammonia stains (dark brown) on oak flooring?
Barbara Hess    04 Sep 2009, 08:40
I filled some cracks in my beautiful hardwood(white oak) floor with wood putty. When I did that I rubbed around the outside of the crack to blend in and smooth the surface. Now I have smear marks around the crack on the wood. The marks are more noticeable than the cracks. Please help me remove the smears.
Hilary    23 Aug 2009, 13:54
I just tried the tooth paste on a water stain caused by a steam mop that was left standing for a bit. It worked like a charm.

What do you suggest for the entire floor to give it a nice shine. (the floors are poly coated hardwood and are 2 yrs old
Amy    29 May 2009, 13:56
My daughter stained the hardwood floors with blue tissue paper that she uses for crafts. The color from the tissue paper absorbed into the wood. Any ideas on how to remove it??
Alex Gurin    20 Feb 2009, 09:57
Hi. While caring the chain saw from the seller through the keeping room and the kitchen I accidentally dripped chain lubricating oil on my 1754 wide board flooring, leaving a continues thin oil line all over the house floor. I did not notice it right away, so it had time to set in.
I did wipe the oil drip to the best of my abilities but it already penetrated the wood.
So far I’ve tried turpentine, stain remover, 70% alcohol, and soda, peroxide and sanding.
Nothing worked so far. I will try ammonia, bleach, detergent with water next. Does any one had the same issue and what would you recommend I use. The floor is plain wood - chestnut in one room, white and red pine the other rooms. There is no finish of any kind on the floors – el’natural. Would very much appreciate any recommendations. Alex
Mary    03 Jan 2009, 14:06
I have the same problema and would love to hear the best way to remove as well!
Bob Duncan    31 Dec 2008, 07:17
I have a question? Black mould marks on hardwood floors after christmas tree watering - what is best way to remove?

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