1) Take out all the hardware and remove the drawers from the dresser
Taking out the hardware is going to be the easiest part of this project so enjoy it. I put all mine in a little baggy in case I want to refinish those later or use them on something else. Then I took out all the drawers and stripped down the wood in between the drawers which was relatively easy just because they are straight boards. If you look closely, you can see the little ridges that caused me some trouble and those are both at the top and the bottom of the furniture. AND on the drawers :(
2) Strip the drawers
This will take a while especially if your furniture has a bountiful 11 drawers like mine does. Some drawers are large, some are small, and some are that happy medium. No matter the size, they were all kind of a pain in the ass. They have the little ridges on each one of them and those are some crooks and crannies even the nimblest of fingers can't reach. All you can do is poke and prod in there until you see some results and then by that time there is more gunk (the stuff you are trying to take off just in a liquid form now that it is being dissolved) that you need to remove before it dries. So in my opinion, it is best if you have someone help you because your hands, eyes, and mind will get tired just trying to accomplish this task alone.
3) Clean up
As mentioned above there is gunk. And a lot at that. Let me paint a clearer picture of what gunk actually is. It is this this strip all mixed with the dissolving stain/varnish/lacquer that you are trying to get off. Gunk is a pain because the strip all will evaporate so quickly that this goo will dry on your surface unless you dissolve it all evenly in timely manner. This stuff is a bad deal and has the consistency of thick liquid glue. And it gets stuck in any crevasse that your furniture has. Rant over. So, to clean up this gunk you have to take a clean steel wool, and clean strip all and go over the surfaces again in a uniform fashion so that there are no streaks left and if there are they are with the grain of the wood so no one will notice anyways besides you of course. Then after you do this you will have gunk that will have dried on in big blobs and that wont come off with strip all. What I found that works well is just a wall paper scraper because it has a wonderfully flat blade that scrapes off big blobs of gunk.
And that was the end of phase two. In phase 3 I will be sanding and staining and hopefully be showing you the finished product by the end of next week. I am thinking I will go with a darker stain even though this cherry wood is absolutely gorgeous. Stay tuned and please if you have any questions leave them in the comments!
Love,
Tinsel & Tulle