Help! Waxed cotton jacket left stains/marks on wood bannister

Sorry if this isn’t the right sub to post this. I left a waxed cotton jacket on this wood banister for a day or two and it left this behind. Is there any way to fix it aside from refinishing the banister? I’m assuming some of the wax melted onto the banister because of the rad nearby. I’ve tried soap and water, vinegar and water, and using a hair dryer.

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What’s going on with my dining table?

I applied two coats of tung oil (waiting 72 hours between applications) to the table and after hosting thanksgiving dinner the table has a few discolored spots like this now. I’m not sure how to fix them, I attempted to add more tung oil but that did nothing. Do I try to finely sand and reapply tung oil to the entire table? Do I need to use something else after the tung oil to protect the finish? Apologies but I’m still new to woodworking and fear I’ve made a bunch of rookie mistakes.

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Human size photo box

Someone asked me to build a photo box for them. After decorated, persons would take pictures in it. Can anyone assist me with guidance on how I keep the pieces together. What hinges I should use and if possible, an idea of the plan to put it together in a sturdy manner?

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Framing an Asymmetrical Mirror

So I've got another project in the works that is entirely new to me. I want to frame this mirror for my wife, but conventional techniques won't work, for obvious reasons. I'm considering something like using construction adhesive to anchor the mirror to 1/2" or 5/8" plywood backing trimmed to the same profile, but I'm unsure how to finish the trim. The trim needs to extend inward from the edge by about an inch to cover up imperfections. I've never tried steam bending, but it wouldn't be my first choice. I'm curious if there is any kind of weather stripping or similar flexible material that could aesthetically double as trim, any input on the plan I have so far, or a completely different direction is welcome! The mirror is 1/2" thick 54" long and ~31" wide at the base

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Building a woodshop layout, maintaining path of travel

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Teak vs goncalo alves: which to stain

Hey guys, I bought some wood in preparation for making a chessboard, and I might have made a minor mistake in that both of these may age the same color. I have heard that goncalo alves darkens with age however I can't figure out what teak turns to besides grey with age, as all the pictures online are in regards to decks/ furniture/ stuff that is outside 24/7, which is a little different from my chessboard application. I am thinking about which one to stain a darker color or brighten up if possible for the best possible contrast down the road. Teak left alves right.

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Help choosing Rubio Monocoat (or similar) finish for dresser?

I have an unfinished dresser made of Parawood (Rubberwood) and I would like to finish it for my baby’s nursery. I’m currently pregnant, so would like to use a simple, non-toxic finish (zero VOC). I came across Rubio Monocoat, and like the sound of the product, but am a little lost with choosing a color. I would like to keep the wood as light/natural as possible, and really want to avoid yellowing. I’ve looked at the white finishes, but didn’t love how some of the white pigment seems to “sit” in the grain. It seems hard to find consistent examples of the different colors. If anyone has worked with the light/white colors of Rubio Monocoat (specifically on Parawood), I’d love to know your thoughts/process!

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C channel orientation for desk

Complete newbie just bought my first house so it’s time to finally build and create the spaces I’ve been wanting. That being said I’m looking at making a 98” desk using a butcher block style counter top. It will be 98” long, 25” wide, 1 3/4 thick I believe. There will be shelves holding it up 14” wide on each sides. So I will have a big gap and don’t want any sag and also don’t want to do any legs. I see the c channel is the answer. On what I’ve found on the internet everyone does it by doing it across the short side. One in the middle two close to the edges like I have in the picture “A”. To me it makes sense to do like two going long ways to help support the center better figure “B”. I’m sure there’s a reason for it the other way but want to make sure I’m doing it the right way before ordering materials. With the weight of the wood itself, plus my pc, 3D printer shaking and other misc stuff it will get heavy. Thank you!

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Removing metal from white oak slab

I all! I recently dried and debarked a 2 inch white oak slab and found a couple old rusty nails that where cut by the mill and left in the slab. How do I remove them. I tried pounding them through with no luck

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I'm shoving this sub to my friends. (one of them is trans)

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These are satisfying numbers

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