As soon as I got this question about wood filler and the finishing problems it can create, I knew a lot of people would like to hear the answer.
Q: How can I get rid of residue left behind by wood filler? I’ve built a fireplace mantel out of maple and maple veneered plywood and I was always planning to paint it.
However, having put it in place and listened to my wife (often a good idea), I am now considering stain. My concern is around the wood filler. I’ve made sure to get all areas very smooth (and ready for paint) but there are areas where the wood filler appears to have absorbed into the grain of the wood a bit.
I’ve tested a few trial pieces in which I’ve made and filled small holes and am getting blotches where this has happened. Is there a way to draw this filler out of the wood or any other possible solution? More sanding with 220-grit seems to help but I’m not confident it will solve the problem.
A: This mantel looks fabulous. I’m impressed with your work and design!
Wood filler can be tricky stuff for precisely the reasons you’re seeing. It affects the way wood absorbs stain and this leads to very obvious differences in staining results.
More sanding will remove the partial sealing of the wood grain, but it takes quite a bit of sanding to do the job.
Hand sanding usually doesn’t do the trick. You need some sort of machine sanding. And if all this sanding is happening on factory-veneered plywood, then you really don’t have much wood to work with. Factory veneers are usually thinner than 1/32-inch so it’s easy to sand right through to the ugly, underlying layers.
So, what can you do?
I’d try to remove the filler residue by scraping, not sanding. A cabinet scraper is a piece of rectangular tool steel that has a sharp, square edge. You use this edge to shave off very thin curls of wood, like you see in the top photo.
This sounds aggressive, but it’s actually more controllable than machine sanding and more effective for removing filler residue.
Hold the edge of the scraper on the wood, with the body tilted about 10 or 20 degrees away from vertical, then push the tool away from you across the surface. Do some scraping, test the area with a bit of stain to see if the residue is gone, then scrape more if there’s still a colour difference.
Cabinet scrapers usually require sharpening, but Lee Valley Tools does sell a scraper that’s ready to use. If you’re careful, scraping should work.
If you can’t get things to look good enough to your eye, then you can always paint as you’d originally planned.
Beware the swirls
On a related note, if you’ve sanded your mantel with a random orbit sander, then there’s a very good chance that swirl marks will show up all over the wood after stain goes on. Try a little stain somewhere to see.
The antidote to swirl marks is good, old-fashioned hand sanding in the direction of the wood grain only. A good choice for sandpaper is 180-grit. Sand everything, including scraped areas, for an even look.