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I have a lacquered table top with some minor dust specs sitting in the surface of the lacquer. I don't want to sand it down and reapply more lacquer. Can I use a super fine sand paper (what grain?) to get rid of the dust without causing any issues? The surface is a satin finish so it doesn't need to be crystal clear.

Programmer
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1 Answers1

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Try "sanding" it with a brown paper bag. That will be just abrasive enough to knock loose any dust nibs. It may polish the surface, though; try it on an inconspicuous area first to make sure you're happy with the result.

Warning: this may increase the shine of the surface; depending on your needs that could be either good or bad.

(It did a fine job on the table I recently refinished, but that was glossy oil poly.)

keshlam
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    What is the grit count of the bag? – Matt Nov 25 '15 at 17:04
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    Good question, @matt; I'd love tp know what the approximate equivalent would be. – keshlam Nov 25 '15 at 17:06
  • I marked this as Accepted because I was able to take the dust off using this method. But just an FYI, the paper bag actually polished the lacquer so the satin finish had a noticeably bright shine in the area that I "sanded". – Programmer Nov 30 '15 at 17:39
  • Hmm. Thanks, @Hooplehead24; I'll add that to the answer to warn future readers. – keshlam Nov 30 '15 at 18:27
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    @Hooplehead24, it's not a perfect fix but you might try gently rubbing the shiny area with fine steel wool, either 000 or 0000 grade. I've sometimes had better luck doing something like this with a fibreglass eraser but that's a specialist tool that I presume you don't have and there's little point in buying just for this one job. – Graphus Dec 01 '15 at 10:15