Yeah, I really have. :banghead: I don't know how to get it off and would be glad of suggestions.
What happened was that my journal was open on the table when I spilt a drink and didn't clean it up for a long time after it dried. Only then did I see that the moisture had transferred the ink from my journal page onto the table top. It won't wipe off.
At least, it's in mirror writing. But.... it's something very personal and not what I want anyone else to see. I can actually read mirror writing myself and I don't know how many other people can.
The coffee table is pale pine with a cheap surface varnish painted on it. It's quite grainy and the ink seems to have embedded in the grain. The ink is from an anonymous biro (ball point pen).
So far I've tried mild stuff like washing up liquid and cream cleaner (Cif, if that means anything to others). If possible, I'd rather not wreck the surface of the coffee table if I can avoid it. It has a lot of history - it's from the 1950's, handmade and has a back story that I'm fond of. It's one of the few things I'm at all sentimental about. But I still don't do sentimentality very much so if the surface has to go, the surface has to go. I'd just like to avoid that if I can.
Any ideas? I'd be grateful for any. By the way, I'm in the UK, so non-UK brand names won't mean anything to me. :)
What happened was that my journal was open on the table when I spilt a drink and didn't clean it up for a long time after it dried. Only then did I see that the moisture had transferred the ink from my journal page onto the table top. It won't wipe off.
At least, it's in mirror writing. But.... it's something very personal and not what I want anyone else to see. I can actually read mirror writing myself and I don't know how many other people can.
The coffee table is pale pine with a cheap surface varnish painted on it. It's quite grainy and the ink seems to have embedded in the grain. The ink is from an anonymous biro (ball point pen).
So far I've tried mild stuff like washing up liquid and cream cleaner (Cif, if that means anything to others). If possible, I'd rather not wreck the surface of the coffee table if I can avoid it. It has a lot of history - it's from the 1950's, handmade and has a back story that I'm fond of. It's one of the few things I'm at all sentimental about. But I still don't do sentimentality very much so if the surface has to go, the surface has to go. I'd just like to avoid that if I can.
Any ideas? I'd be grateful for any. By the way, I'm in the UK, so non-UK brand names won't mean anything to me. :)