Cura dei mobili in rovere: la guida completa
Oak furniture lasts decades with the right care. Treated well, an oak shelf or sideboard outlives most of the things it stores. Treated badly, it stains, warps, or dries out within a couple of seasons. The good news: caring for oak is simple. Five minutes a week and a small annual ritual is enough.
This guide covers what we recommend for KUUDU furniture and any other natural oiled oak piece.
Daily and weekly: the basics
Wipe surfaces with a soft, dry or barely-damp microfibre cloth. Dust builds up faster than people expect, and a quick weekly wipe prevents grit from working into the grain. Always wipe along the grain, not across it.
Use coasters under glasses, mugs, anything ceramic. Oiled oak is more forgiving than lacquered oak, but standing water will still leave a ring if it sits long enough.
Keep direct heat off the surface. Plant pots, hot pans, laptops running warm. Three usual suspects. A felt pad or a trivet costs nothing and saves the wood.
Monthly: a proper clean
Once a month, give it more than a wipe. Use a cloth dampened with warm water and a tiny amount of pH-neutral soap. Wood soap if you have it, otherwise a drop of dish soap. Wring it out so it's barely wet. Wipe along the grain, then immediately follow with a dry cloth.
Avoid all-purpose sprays, glass cleaner, vinegar, and anything with citrus or solvent in it. They strip the oil out of the wood and leave it dull and thirsty.
Yearly: re-oiling
Oiled oak needs re-oiling roughly once a year. Pieces in dry rooms with underfloor heating may want it twice. Pieces in cooler rooms can stretch to eighteen months. The signs are easy to read: the wood looks lighter, drier, slightly thirsty, and water no longer beads on the surface.
The process takes about thirty minutes per piece, plus drying time:
Clean the surface with a barely-damp cloth. Let it dry fully.
Lightly buff any rough patches with a very fine grit (320 or finer), going with the grain. Keep it light.
Apply a thin, even coat of hardwax oil with a lint-free cloth. Less is more. A thin coat penetrates better than a thick one.
Let it sit for ten to fifteen minutes, then buff off any excess with a clean cloth.
Leave it overnight before putting anything back on the surface.
We recommend a natural hardwax oil from Osmo or a similar brand. Avoid linseed oil on its own. It never fully cures and stays tacky.
Removing marks and stains
Water rings
A fresh water ring usually lifts with a light buff using a cloth and a drop of oil. For older rings, very fine sanding with a light hand followed by a fresh coat of oil restores the surface in most cases.
Heat marks
Same approach. Gentle, very fine sanding, then re-oil the affected area.
Ink, wine, food
Blot, don't rub. If it's set, a light fine-grit pass and re-oil usually does the job. Don't over-sand. The goal is to lift the mark, not to dig in.
Scratches
Light scratches usually disappear after re-oiling alone. The oil soaks into the open grain and blends them in. For deeper scratches, the safest fix is a colour-matched hardwax repair stick or wood-touch-up pen, blended into the grain. For very deep damage, contact us. We can advise on repair or replacement of individual components.
A note on sanding: keep it gentle and stay on the surface. Aggressive sanding does more harm than good on any oiled oak finish.
What to avoid
Silicone-based polishes. They build up and prevent future re-oiling.
Vinegar and citrus cleaners. They etch the finish.
Microfibre that's been used with cleaning chemicals. Keep one cloth just for furniture.
Standing water, even briefly. Wipe spills as soon as you see them.
Direct sunlight for long stretches. Oak darkens beautifully over time, but uneven exposure leads to uneven colour. Rotate items on shelves occasionally.
The long view
Oiled oak doesn't stay the same. It darkens slightly. The grain becomes more pronounced. Small marks build into a quiet patina. That's the point. A well-cared-for KUUDU shelf at year fifteen looks better than at year one. Fuller, deeper, more itself.
If you ever need replacement parts (a board, a side panel, a connector), every component is available individually. Modular furniture isn't disposable, and neither is the system around it.
Browse our modular oak shelving or learn how to design your own configuration.