Making a Wood Mould Using a Hot Glue Gun

Picked and Poshed
by Picked and Poshed
3 Materials
$20
2 Days
Medium

I scored this dresser at the thrift store for $25. It did need some work but I can’t pass up a deal!

I come across pieces often with part of a missing leg or wood trim and I usually steer away from them.

But I gave making a mould a shot for the first time as this piece was in good condition otherwise.

The tools I used to make the mould are

cooking spray

hot glue gun

wood filler

To replicate the missing piece I needed a mould. I am going to make a mould of the good leg using hot glue as a mould.


First I spray the cooking spray so the hot glue won’t stick.


Second I just layer the hot glue around the general area and let it set up and cool which just takes a few minutes.


Here is my mould! I just have it up to the missing piece of leg right here.

I added woodfill right to the missing piece and then sprayed cooking spray on the mould before taping it around this area.

It took a few hours to setup.

This is after the mould was removed. It is far from perfect but I will sand it smooth.

I took my surfprep sander to it here to get most of the blemishes out.

And here is the missing leg. It’s not perfect but I learned making a mould isn’t that difficult at all it’s just time consuming.

I like to layer and blend colors and that also helps mask the imperfections.

Here is the completed look once I got her painted and the brass hardware shined.


Find me on Instagram making things pretty or at least trying and I have a reel of painting this one there too.


Instagram.com/pickedandposhed


Stay safe and creative!

Resources for this project:
Any price and availability information displayed on [relevant Amazon Site(s), as applicable] at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.
Hometalk may collect a small share of sales from the links on this page.More info
Frequently asked questions
Have a question about this project?
  1 question
  • Paula Schenk Paula Schenk on Dec 04, 2023

    I have a cherry wood table that got wet in the flood and part of table top turned white. How can I fix this so I don’t have to get rid of table?

Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 10 comments
Next