How do you fix raised wood grain?

After sanding the wood to about 150- or 180-grit, wet it with a sponge or cloth just short of puddling. Let the wood dry. Overnight is best, but three or four hours is usually sufficient if the air is warm and dry. Then sand the raised grain smooth with the same grit sandpaper you used last or one-numbered grit finer.

What happens if you sand damp wood?





Wet sanding (at least with woodworking) doesn’t include additional water, just whatever is withheld in the body of the sandpaper or sanding brick. We aren’t trying to soak the wood. The surface can air dry fairly quickly, but if we saturate it, then the wood will expand and fibers will stand on end again.

Can you sand the grain out of wood?

The grain of a wood is the direction in which most or all of the wood fibers are pointing, and one of the axioms of woodworking is to sand with the grain. Depending on the tool you employ, sanding with the grain per se might not always be possible, but it is important to avoid sanding across the grain.

Should you ever sand against the grain?

No matter what type of edge you’re going for, always maintain steady pressure and sand with, not against, the grain. Don’t employ sandpaper to remove things like pencil marks or dried glue, but do use it to smooth joints or filled nail holes.

How do you fix sanding against the grain?

Fold a piece of the same grit paper that made the scratches into three layers and sand with the grain, pushing the paper into the corner of the wood. Change to finer grits of sandpaper as needed, and stop sanding as soon as the scratches are no longer visible.