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If you want your woodworking project to look clean and professional, hiding the screws is the perfect finishing touch. Rather than having those metallic screw heads clash against the wood, there are tons of things you can do to cover them up and make them invisible. Keep reading for the best solutions for disguising visible screws in wood. We'll also share a few assembly tips to help you avoid visible screws completely.

Things You Should Know

  • Put an adhesive screw cap or install a wood plug over the hole to hide the screw and match the wood grain.
  • Fill the hole with wood filler or wood glue mixed with sawdust. For deep pocket holes, use auto body filler instead.
  • Peel back a surface layer of wood with a chisel and install your screw underneath it. Glue the wood back down to hide the screw.
  • ​​Try countersinking or drilling pocket holes to hide the screws deeper into the wood.
1

Stick on an adhesive screw cap.

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  1. Adhesive screw caps are the quickest and easiest fix. Get adhesive screw caps that match the color of the wood that you’re applying them to. Just peel the screw cap off of the backing and press it firmly over the screw head. Rub the screw cap so it’s flat and smooth against the surface.[1]
    • Be sure to get screw caps that are slightly larger in diameter than the screw’s head. That way, none of the screw will show through.
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2

Fill the hole with a wood plug.

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7

Install the screw under the wood’s surface.

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  1. Hold your chisel at an angle to the wood and tap the end with a hammer. Peel up a piece of wood that’s about 2 inches (5.1 cm) long and 110 inch (2.5 mm) thick. Drive your screw through the spot you just exposed. Then, apply a layer of wood glue on the surface and clamp the wood piece flat on the surface until it’s dry.[8]
    • The screw will be invisible underneath the wood, but you may see slightly raised edges where you used your chisel. Just rub fine-grit sandpaper over the surface to smooth it out.
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9

Drill pocket holes for the screws.

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Expert Q&A

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  • Question
    What are plugs?
    Patrick Johns
    Patrick Johns
    Home Improvement Specialist
    Patrick Johns is a Home Improvement Specialist and the Owner of CatchAll Handyman Services. With more than 28 years of experience, he has worked on a variety of home improvement projects, such as carpentry, plumbing, and door and window installations in both commercial and residential properties.
    Patrick Johns
    Home Improvement Specialist
    Expert Answer
    Plugs are little plastic or wooden pieces that you insert into a screw hole to cover the nut. They're especially common with security screen doors.
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About This Article

Patrick Johns
Co-authored by:
Home Improvement Specialist
This article was co-authored by Patrick Johns and by wikiHow staff writer, Hunter Rising. Patrick Johns is a Home Improvement Specialist and the Owner of CatchAll Handyman Services. With more than 28 years of experience, he has worked on a variety of home improvement projects, such as carpentry, plumbing, and door and window installations in both commercial and residential properties. This article has been viewed 88,086 times.
5 votes - 40%
Co-authors: 9
Updated: October 25, 2022
Views: 88,086
Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 88,086 times.

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