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  3. possible to clean the backing fabric of this art?

possible to clean the backing fabric of this art?

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  • T This user is from outside of this forum
    T This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote last edited by [email protected]
    #1

    I have this piece of art I really like. I got it about 15 years ago at a thrift store. I'm not sure what you call this style/medium. The only thing I've seen is "folkart".

    It is dingy and I want to clean it. Particularly the white fabric background.

    I don't remember exactly what I did but at some point I tried spot cleaning and this was the result:

    construction:

    base: 1/4" hardboard composite with canvas sort of fabric glued on

    hardboard I don't know if this term is regional or well known. It's that brown sheet that is often used on the backside of cheap modern furniture, like a bookshelf. It's smooth on one side and rough on the other.

    Top and bottom edges are in a groove of wood molding strips; these are stapled on and can be removed

    design is made up of little items glued on: beads, small rocks, cord, ceramic

    doesn't seem to be a top coat or anything

    There's not really any hidden areas to test.

    the glue is quite robust, I have been surprised that hardly anything has fallen off.

    Any ideas? Hardboard really can't get wet.

    I wish I had properly protected it years ago.

    tal@olio.cafeT C H X 4 Replies Last reply
    44
    • T [email protected]

      I have this piece of art I really like. I got it about 15 years ago at a thrift store. I'm not sure what you call this style/medium. The only thing I've seen is "folkart".

      It is dingy and I want to clean it. Particularly the white fabric background.

      I don't remember exactly what I did but at some point I tried spot cleaning and this was the result:

      construction:

      base: 1/4" hardboard composite with canvas sort of fabric glued on

      hardboard I don't know if this term is regional or well known. It's that brown sheet that is often used on the backside of cheap modern furniture, like a bookshelf. It's smooth on one side and rough on the other.

      Top and bottom edges are in a groove of wood molding strips; these are stapled on and can be removed

      design is made up of little items glued on: beads, small rocks, cord, ceramic

      doesn't seem to be a top coat or anything

      There's not really any hidden areas to test.

      the glue is quite robust, I have been surprised that hardly anything has fallen off.

      Any ideas? Hardboard really can't get wet.

      I wish I had properly protected it years ago.

      tal@olio.cafeT This user is from outside of this forum
      tal@olio.cafeT This user is from outside of this forum
      [email protected]
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      Have you tried using a vacuum cleaner?

      T 1 Reply Last reply
      5
      • tal@olio.cafeT [email protected]

        Have you tried using a vacuum cleaner?

        T This user is from outside of this forum
        T This user is from outside of this forum
        [email protected]
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        hmmm I don't recall. Would be worth trying. Maybe a shop vac or something really strong would be able to suck off some dirt. If I had access to one. I'll try the one I have.

        R 1 Reply Last reply
        2
        • T [email protected]

          hmmm I don't recall. Would be worth trying. Maybe a shop vac or something really strong would be able to suck off some dirt. If I had access to one. I'll try the one I have.

          R This user is from outside of this forum
          R This user is from outside of this forum
          [email protected]
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          Consider doing a small test section in one corner before trying anything. Also take a clear photo in full daylight before you start and make comparisons with full daylight pictures later. It is very easy to have the lighting and perspective completely change how something looks, so make the comparison as apples to apples as possible.

          Also, using plain water for a simple rinse can be very effective at removing dirt just by rinsing and repeating, no soap. This is lower risk than many other approaches but requires you fully dry before checking the result. Definitely research other options, but it may be good to try cleaning with plain water.

          T 1 Reply Last reply
          3
          • R [email protected]

            Consider doing a small test section in one corner before trying anything. Also take a clear photo in full daylight before you start and make comparisons with full daylight pictures later. It is very easy to have the lighting and perspective completely change how something looks, so make the comparison as apples to apples as possible.

            Also, using plain water for a simple rinse can be very effective at removing dirt just by rinsing and repeating, no soap. This is lower risk than many other approaches but requires you fully dry before checking the result. Definitely research other options, but it may be good to try cleaning with plain water.

            T This user is from outside of this forum
            T This user is from outside of this forum
            [email protected]
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            I'm not sure how to use water because the structure is composed of hardboard with fabric glued onto it. Not sure if hardboard is a universal term, here is a picture of what I mean:

            A closer zoom of the bottom picture showing construction:

            The porous, adsorbent side of the board has had the canvas glued to it. How to rinse that?

            (Filesize limits on lemmy prevent posting larger photos.)

            1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • T [email protected]

              I have this piece of art I really like. I got it about 15 years ago at a thrift store. I'm not sure what you call this style/medium. The only thing I've seen is "folkart".

              It is dingy and I want to clean it. Particularly the white fabric background.

              I don't remember exactly what I did but at some point I tried spot cleaning and this was the result:

              construction:

              base: 1/4" hardboard composite with canvas sort of fabric glued on

              hardboard I don't know if this term is regional or well known. It's that brown sheet that is often used on the backside of cheap modern furniture, like a bookshelf. It's smooth on one side and rough on the other.

              Top and bottom edges are in a groove of wood molding strips; these are stapled on and can be removed

              design is made up of little items glued on: beads, small rocks, cord, ceramic

              doesn't seem to be a top coat or anything

              There's not really any hidden areas to test.

              the glue is quite robust, I have been surprised that hardly anything has fallen off.

              Any ideas? Hardboard really can't get wet.

              I wish I had properly protected it years ago.

              C This user is from outside of this forum
              C This user is from outside of this forum
              [email protected]
              wrote last edited by
              #6

              Your first tries on spot cleaning look to me like the canvas was painted in white. So I'd look for options to clean paintings and maybe retouch the spot you tried to clean with white paint.

              This seems to be a pretty detailed guide.

              tal@olio.cafeT 1 Reply Last reply
              9
              • C [email protected]

                Your first tries on spot cleaning look to me like the canvas was painted in white. So I'd look for options to clean paintings and maybe retouch the spot you tried to clean with white paint.

                This seems to be a pretty detailed guide.

                tal@olio.cafeT This user is from outside of this forum
                tal@olio.cafeT This user is from outside of this forum
                [email protected]
                wrote last edited by
                #7

                I'm pretty sure that that guide is one of those AI-generated spam sites. In this case, it appears to use a character where the LLM involved wasn't too sure about whether the character is a house painter or an artistic painter. Which doesn't mean that the information on it is necessarily wrong, just that I'd be cautious as to errors. If you want information from an LLM, probably better in terms of response quality to just, well, go ask an LLM yourself without the distortion from a spammer trying to have the LLM role-play some character.

                C 1 Reply Last reply
                4
                • tal@olio.cafeT [email protected]

                  I'm pretty sure that that guide is one of those AI-generated spam sites. In this case, it appears to use a character where the LLM involved wasn't too sure about whether the character is a house painter or an artistic painter. Which doesn't mean that the information on it is necessarily wrong, just that I'd be cautious as to errors. If you want information from an LLM, probably better in terms of response quality to just, well, go ask an LLM yourself without the distortion from a spammer trying to have the LLM role-play some character.

                  C This user is from outside of this forum
                  C This user is from outside of this forum
                  [email protected]
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8

                  Thanks for adding that context!

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  3
                  • T [email protected]

                    I have this piece of art I really like. I got it about 15 years ago at a thrift store. I'm not sure what you call this style/medium. The only thing I've seen is "folkart".

                    It is dingy and I want to clean it. Particularly the white fabric background.

                    I don't remember exactly what I did but at some point I tried spot cleaning and this was the result:

                    construction:

                    base: 1/4" hardboard composite with canvas sort of fabric glued on

                    hardboard I don't know if this term is regional or well known. It's that brown sheet that is often used on the backside of cheap modern furniture, like a bookshelf. It's smooth on one side and rough on the other.

                    Top and bottom edges are in a groove of wood molding strips; these are stapled on and can be removed

                    design is made up of little items glued on: beads, small rocks, cord, ceramic

                    doesn't seem to be a top coat or anything

                    There's not really any hidden areas to test.

                    the glue is quite robust, I have been surprised that hardly anything has fallen off.

                    Any ideas? Hardboard really can't get wet.

                    I wish I had properly protected it years ago.

                    H This user is from outside of this forum
                    H This user is from outside of this forum
                    [email protected]
                    wrote last edited by
                    #9

                    I worked in custom picture framing shops for a decade, and we would bring things like this to art restorers we contracted with.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    3
                    • T [email protected]

                      I have this piece of art I really like. I got it about 15 years ago at a thrift store. I'm not sure what you call this style/medium. The only thing I've seen is "folkart".

                      It is dingy and I want to clean it. Particularly the white fabric background.

                      I don't remember exactly what I did but at some point I tried spot cleaning and this was the result:

                      construction:

                      base: 1/4" hardboard composite with canvas sort of fabric glued on

                      hardboard I don't know if this term is regional or well known. It's that brown sheet that is often used on the backside of cheap modern furniture, like a bookshelf. It's smooth on one side and rough on the other.

                      Top and bottom edges are in a groove of wood molding strips; these are stapled on and can be removed

                      design is made up of little items glued on: beads, small rocks, cord, ceramic

                      doesn't seem to be a top coat or anything

                      There's not really any hidden areas to test.

                      the glue is quite robust, I have been surprised that hardly anything has fallen off.

                      Any ideas? Hardboard really can't get wet.

                      I wish I had properly protected it years ago.

                      X This user is from outside of this forum
                      X This user is from outside of this forum
                      [email protected]
                      wrote last edited by
                      #10

                      What about the sticky lint rollers? You'd at least avoid rubbing anything in that way.

                      1 Reply Last reply
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