Tony,
What did you use in the poultice? I have heard that rubbing alcohol works on ink. My kids took a black permanent marker to my mother's brand new leather couch one day. I nearly drove myself to the looney farm trying to figure out how to clean it before she got home. Well, she got home, looked at the kids, sighed and rolled her eyes, grabbed the rubbing alcohol and cleaned it all up without a problem. That was leather though, I've never tried it on stone. (We conditioned it later with lexol.)
Georgia Rivera
Stone Buff, LLC
On Mon, Jun 1, 2009 at 6:36 PM, Tony StoneBrite <tony@stonebritechicago.com> wrote:
I actually tried both and they did not work. But what did work is poultice with straight bleachuncovered. Keep that in your memory bank.Thanks.--- On Mon, 6/1/09, anthony@777-7797.com <anthony@777-7797.com> wrote:Have A Great DayTony DiBartolo
From: anthony@777-7797.com <anthony@777-7797.com>
Subject: RE: [sccpartners] ink stains
To: "'Restoration and Maintenance'" <sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com>, tony@stonebritechicago.com
Date: Monday, June 1, 2009, 5:32 PM
I had success with Dr Hueston’s techniques of poultice and either acetone or Methalyne chloride
Anthony Masecchia
Master Stone Consultant
Marble Maestro
T. 514.777.7797
F. 514.904.1815
E. anthony@777-7797.com
From: Tony StoneBrite [mailto:tony@stonebritechicago.com]
Sent: June-01-09 4:09 PM
To: Restoration and Maintenance
Subject: [sccpartners] ink stains
Anybody have a remedy to remove blue ink stains from a light color granite?
Thanks in advance
Have A Great Day
Tony DiBartolo
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