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I almost made a terrible mistake last October.
My daughter came over for Sunday dinner, ran her hand across my motherās dining table, and said, āMom, it might be time to let this one go.ā
She meant well. I know she did.
But that table has been in my family for forty years. My mother bought it the year my youngest brother was born. I inherited it when she passed. Itās where I taught my girls to set a proper table. Where my grandchildren do their homework when they stay over on Fridays.
It had scratches from four decades of living. Two water rings Iād been staring at for three years. The finish had gone cloudy and gray, like the wood had just given up.
Iād tried everything to fix it. The walnut trick from Pinterest. Furniture markers that were the wrong shade of brown. Old English that smelled terrible and woreoff in a week. Mayonnaise on the water rings, which did nothing except make my kitchen smell like a sandwich shop.
A refinisher told me $475 and two weeks without my table.
I told him Iād think about it. What I meant was Iād worry about it for six more months and do nothing.
Then my friend Barbara from church mentioned a jar her daughter-in-law hadused on their coffee table. Said it was plant oils and beeswax. Said it actually went into the wood instead of sitting on top.
I almost didnāt order it. Iād wasted enough money on things that didnāt work.
But it had a 30-day guarantee where you could send it back and keep the jar, and at my age I appreciate a company that puts their money where their mouth is.
Hereās what happened.

I started with the long scratch on the right side of my motherās table. The one Iād been catching every time I set plates down for the last five years.
I rubbed a little bit of the salve into it with a cloth. Then I went to make my tea because I didnāt want to stand there getting my hopes up again.
When I came back, the scratch was gone.
I donāt mean faded. I mean gone. I ran my finger over where it had been and the wood was smooth.
I called my friend Barbara and said, āYou werenāt exaggerating.ā
What happens is the oil goes into the scratch and brings back the woodās own color. Not because youāre adding dye. The wood just has what it needs again.Then the beeswax seals it so it stays that way when you wipe the table down.
I did the other scratches. Same thing. Every one of them.
Emily J. said:
āI used it on our oak dining table that had scratches from years of kids doing homework on it. Half the table first to test, the scratches just vanished.ā

This is the part I still canāt quite believe.
The ring from my motherās vase had been on that table for three years. The one from my husbandās coffee mug, about two years. Iād tried toothpaste, the iron trick, oil and vinegar, mayonnaise. Nothing. Not even a little bit.
I rubbed the salve over the vase ring. Went back to the kitchen. Came back with my tea.
The ring was gone.
Not lighter. Not blurry. Gone.
I sat down at the table and put my hand where the ring used to be. Smooth.Warm. Like it had never been there.
The oil pushes out the trapped moisture that causes those white marks. Then the beeswax seals it shut so they canāt come back.
One application. Thatās what it took for a ring Iād been staring at for three years.
James M. said:
āThe water marks on our coffee table had been there for 20+ years.One application and they were gone. My wife thought Iād bought a new table.ā

I couldnāt stop.
After the dining table I went straight to my motherās antique dresser in the hallway. Seventy years old. Iād stopped really looking at it because the scratches made me sad.
Twenty minutes later it looked the way it did in the photographs from her house.
Then the coffee table. The kitchen cabinets that had gone gray so gradually Ihadnāt noticed until suddenly they werenāt gray anymore. The end tables Iād been hiding scratches on with books and picture frames. The hardwood floors in the hallway where my daughterās dog tears around every time they visit.
Oak, walnut, mahogany, pine. Didnāt matter. The wood on all of them was dry and thirsty for the same thing.
My husband came downstairs and said, āWhat are you doing?ā
I said, āFixing everything.ā
Michael S. said
āUsed it on a 30-year-old oak table my wife wanted to throw away. The scratches filled in, the grain popped, the color came back rich and warm. She couldnāt believe I didnāt get it professionally refinished.ā

The refinisher wanted $475 and two weeks with my table. Floor refinishing costs $3,000 to $5,000, and they wonāt even come out for a few scratches.
This jar cost $39. Each piece of furniture took about ten minutes.
You scoop out a small amount with a cloth. Rub it into the wood. Let it sit for a few minutes. Buff off whatās left.
No sanding. No stripping. No trying to match colors from a chart at the hardwarestore.
I did my motherās entire dining table while my tea was still warm.
Sandra W. said:
āI was quoted $300 to refinish my coffee table. Used this instead.The scratches, water marks, and dull spots, all gone. Saved hundreds and it took less time than watching an episode of TV.ā

Every other product Iāve tried says something like āyou may see improvement after 2 to 4 weeks of regular application.ā
This one, you watch it happen. The scratch fills in. The ring disappears. The grain comes back with a warmth I hadnāt seen in years.
My husband walked into the dining room that evening and stopped in the doorway.
āDid you buy a new table?ā
No. I just finally gave it what it needed.
Kathy S. said:
āIn less than 10 minutes my antique school desk went from dry and dull to gorgeous. I keep walking by just to look at it.ā

Something I found out that bothered me.
Howardās Restor-A-Finish, one of the most popular wood products at the hardware store, lists known carcinogens on its own safety data sheet. Iād been using products like that for years. On the table where my grandchildren eat their snacks and do their coloring.
This jar has four ingredients. Cold-pressed hemp seed oil. Jojoba oil. Shea butter. Natural beeswax.
Thatās it.
No chemicals. No fumes. No rubber gloves. It smells like beeswax and honey.
I donāt open windows when I use it. I donāt wash my hands five times after. I just use it and then I tell my daughter to take it home and do her kitchen table.
Sarah W. said:
āYou can tell itās made of high-quality, all-natural ingredients. It smells pleasant, like honeycomb, not chemicals. I donāt have to open windows or worry about my family.ā

Iāve used the same jar on fifteen pieces now. The dining table. The coffee table.End tables. Dressers. Kitchen cabinets. My motherās dresser. The hallway floors.
The jar is still half full.
All those products I bought before, the markers and polishes and oils that sit under my sink doing nothing, cost me more than $87 combined. And not one of them fixed a single scratch.
This jar fixed everything in my house for $39. That works out to about $2.50 per piece of furniture.
Amanda W. said:
āI have two high-end, 30-year-old wooden chairs our decoratorexiled to the garage. One jar later, theyāre back in the living room.ā

Iām telling you about this because I almost threw away my motherās table. I almost paid $475 to a refinisher. I almost gave up.
And then a jar of beeswax and plant oil fixed everything in one afternoon.
They give you 30 days to test it on everything you own. If it doesnāt do what Iāve described, you send it back. They refund you. They cover the return shipping. You keep the jar.
Thatās the part that made me try it. A company that loses money if the product doesnāt work is a company that knows the product works.
Professional refinishing: $400 to $650.
A new dining table: $800 to $2,500.
This jar: $39.
Right now theyāre running 50% off for first-time orders, plus free shipping and a free applicator brush.
Over 90,000 homeowners have figured this out.
āāāāā
"I was skeptical like many others... but holy moly, the difference was incredible."
āāāāā
"Saved hundreds in refinishing costs. My table looks brand new."
āāāāā
"It's like chapstick for your furniture. Why didn't someone tell me about this sooner?"
āāāāā
"My dad didn't believe this would work. Now he wants his own jar."
āDid a fantastic job on 70-year-old chairs. The wood went from gray and life less to warm and beautiful.ā
I set my motherās table for Sunday dinner last week. The oak was warm. Thegrain was deep. The scratches were gone. The rings were gone.
My daughter ran her hand across it and said, āMom, what did you do?ā
I said, āI didnāt throw it away.ā
The link is below. Try it for thirty days. If Iām wrong, send it back.
"Did a fantastic job on 70+ year-old chairs! The wood went from gray and lifeless to warm and beautiful. If it works on 70-year-old antiques, it'll work on yours."
P.P.S. - You're covered for 30 days. They refund you, cover return shipping, and you KEEP the jar. Literally zero risk. The only way you lose is doing nothingāand staring at those water rings for another year.
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