every day
2. a good beeswax polish once a week is good and smells great.
get a new cause that thing got acid sorry ={
You can remove nail varnish remover and cotton wool that stuck to the remover from a wooden table using a Q-tip and nail polish remover. Slightly moisten the Q-tip with the nail polish remover and carefully dab the pieces of cotton wool that are stuck to the table. They should come off quite easily.
A wooden table is called a solid because is hard and we cant break it.
A wooden table is typically referred to as a piece of furniture or specifically as a table. The term "solid" is more often used to describe the sturdiness or construction of the table rather than as a general name for it.
finger nail polish remover, or acetone.
A wax based polish.
To effectively remove permanent marker from a wooden table, you can try using rubbing alcohol or nail polish remover on a cotton ball or cloth. Gently rub the affected area until the marker fades away. Be sure to test a small, inconspicuous area first to ensure it doesn't damage the wood finish.
No, a wooden table is not a living thing. Living things require the ability to grow, reproduce, and respond to stimuli, characteristics that a table does not possess.
To effectively remove Sharpie marks from a wooden table, you can try using rubbing alcohol or nail polish remover on a cotton ball or cloth. Gently rub the affected area until the Sharpie marks start to fade. Be sure to test a small, inconspicuous area first to ensure it doesn't damage the wood finish.
If it is still in the bottle, you can pick it up and put it on the counter. If it has been dripped or painted onto the bed, you can get it off with a solvent called nail polish remover (although that will also remove varnish if the bed is wooden).
Um... nail polish remover? Just a guess. I mean, I've seen nail polish remover sold in stores, and I've always wondered what it was used for. But, when I saw this question, it just jumped out at me that, MAYBE, nail polish remover could be used to REMOVE NAIL POLISH. But again, that's just a guess.I'm sorry but this answer isn't right. First off nail polish REMOVER is used to REMOVE nail polish via nails. If you use it to remove nail polish from a table then you have the possiblility of removing the varnish (the product used to stain a wooden table) Then you have to re-stain the area and then you are getting into a process that's hard to do.I'm NOT sorry, but the first answer most certainly IS correct, and the second answer isn't an answer at all. The questioner didn't ask how to remove nail polish from a wooden table without removing the varnish too. He/she simply asked how to remove nail polish from a wooden table. And nail polish remover, if its name is any indication at all of its purpose, will do the trick. The questioner didn't even say that the table HAD varnish, so possibly it's not even an issue, but for the purposes of this question, it's not an issue anyway, since the questioner didn't mention anything about varnish.Moreover, there's not really anything all that hard about re-staining the area. 1 - buy stain to match the color, 2 - buy paint brush, 3 - apply. Also, if a table is stained, it also likely has two or more coats of polyurethane on top of the stain, and though nail polish remover might remove some of the polyurethane, if you are careful with the nail polish remover, you're not going to go completely through the polyurethane to the stain beneath it. Then it's just a matter of applying more polyurethane (if needed) over the spot, sanding it, and applying another coat. You don't even have to worry about matching colors, since polyurethane is clear.In any event, since the second contributor didn't actually offer an answer, the first answer (though admittedly quite sarcastic) is still the best answer so far. If someone knows of a product that will remove nail polish without affecting the stain or the polyurethane, then that will be a better answer. But until then, the first answer, obvious as it is, is the best answer.Also, the second answer says that "varnish" is "the product used to stain a wooden table". That is not technically true. Varnish is the clear coat that is applied after the stain to seal the piece and protect it from moisture (and nail polish too, for that matter). The polyurethane mentioned in the second paragraph of this answer is a type of varnish.
Wooden table comprises of carbon. Carbon is the element present in wood.