If that's fresh, putting pressure on it with paper towels for a bit and then scrubbing the spot with dish soap should to the trick.
If that's an old stain and you just bought that/noticed it then probably best to find a wood stain in the same color as the furniture and basically paint over the stain
we noticed the oil spilling off the scented diffuser yesterday; We’ve used baking soda and ground corn to soak up what we could overnight. So dish soap and a paper towel might do it?
Ah cool, so you already soaked it up, so you could probably skip the paper towel part. And yeah, dish soap helps remove oils/grease from dishes but it'll also pick up oils from furniture and is probably your best bet. Might be soaked in a bit now though. Also there's wood-friendly stain removers if you want to go out right now
tried the dish soap but it looks soaked in at this point. It feels a little indented, just a tiny tiny bit. Would staining do the trick on its own or should i sand down first?
You should always sand before painting/staining wood, it helps keep it uniform and soak into the wood better. Good luck to you on your hunt for a matching stain!
E- just saw someone else in the thread (69fart69) with staining tips and their advice is on point
If that's fresh, putting pressure on it with paper towels for a bit and then scrubbing the spot with dish soap should to the trick.
If that's an old stain and you just bought that/noticed it then probably best to find a wood stain in the same color as the furniture and basically paint over the stain
we noticed the oil spilling off the scented diffuser yesterday; We’ve used baking soda and ground corn to soak up what we could overnight. So dish soap and a paper towel might do it?
Ah cool, so you already soaked it up, so you could probably skip the paper towel part. And yeah, dish soap helps remove oils/grease from dishes but it'll also pick up oils from furniture and is probably your best bet. Might be soaked in a bit now though. Also there's wood-friendly stain removers if you want to go out right now
tried the dish soap but it looks soaked in at this point. It feels a little indented, just a tiny tiny bit. Would staining do the trick on its own or should i sand down first?
You should always sand before painting/staining wood, it helps keep it uniform and soak into the wood better. Good luck to you on your hunt for a matching stain!
E- just saw someone else in the thread (69fart69) with staining tips and their advice is on point
thank you