Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
I agree with Fred,
In my business if I feel the stone needs to be sealed then I seal
it and include the sealing with my total price. Face it to seal a polished
stone does no9t take a lot of sealer and in many cases the customer piece of
mine is worth it.
I also make sure my customers understand that sealing will stop
etching!!
John E. Freitag
President/Director
The Stone and Tile School
Office 407-567-7652
Cell 407-615-0134
jfreitag@thestoneandtileschool.com
From: Fred Hueston
[mailto:fhueston@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 05, 2010 6:53 AM
To: Restoration and Maintenance
Subject: RE: [sccpartners] black marble/ color enhancing sealer?
I am one of those people who
knows not everything needs to be sealed. but I am also one of those people who
believe if it doesnt need to be sealed and you seal it, what harm does it
do...So, if it makes them feel warm and fuzzy to have it sealed...go ahead and
seal it.
On Thu, Aug 5, 2010 at 5:30 AM, <lorne@fabracleenstoneandtilecare.com>
wrote:
Definately the most important aspect to any job is client
education. Never assume they know anytrhing about what we do, even if they
claim to. Like Stu said, the majority of people think that etch marks are
stains. And although you may verbally explain it and think they understand,
have it in writing so that you know they understand. Plenty of times i have
explained something as simple as what is a stain and what isnt, but when the
job is being done it is as if they forgot our entire conversation..."Oh so
these spots can happen again?" Gotta love what we do. So long story short
i agree with Stu, if they want it sealed i think you should seal it but make
sure they understand what the sealer protects against ad what cant be
prevented.
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
From: stuart rosen <mail@stoneshine.com>
Sender: rosen.stuart@gmail.com
Date: Wed, 4 Aug 2010 23:15:56 -0400
To: Restoration and Maintenance<sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com>
ReplyTo: "Restoration and Maintenance" <sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com>
Subject: RE: [sccpartners] black marble/ color
enhancing sealer?
Barry-how bad a condition are these walls in anyway.Are you
going to hone and repolish
the walls. I just looked at some commercial bathrooms in
nyc.fancy place with polished st. laurant bathrooms. They were trashed(not one
stain) (9000 etches) - managemant wanted to repolish and seal.(what
would stain a wall in a fancy bathroom anyway?)
I told them I would do whatever they wanted but they might
as well book me in advance monthly to keep those areas polished. I
suggeted they hone the bathrooms and color enhance them. It made big sense to
them. If your customers bathrooms are in that bad a shape and the stone would
look good color enhanced, it may be a possibility. If you seal the walls and
they get etched again or whatever your customer may want to have you redo them
because he thinks the sealer failed. I feel it is better to educate them to the
fact they spec'd out the wrong material for a bathroom period.
And theres more!,
I just honed and polished a large area of bottocino walls
soiled from air pollution,smoke,and some paint.
We were able to restore the walls removing all the soils and
polishing to a high luster.
The client wanted to seal the walls which we tested for
porosity.We found that using a wet towel, spray bottle and short of bring in
the fire department we couldn't get that wall to absorb a drop. I informed
the client that he didnt need to seal these walls. It took a bit to explain
to him that after many years of accumulated soils on that wall it was only on
the surface. I also believed that if these walls had been sealed from the
beginning without proper maintenance it would have been just as soiled. I have
worked on a lot of bottocino new and old, walls and floors(polished and
honed) and cant remember one stain that had to be poulticed out.
Isnt it true that bottocino is very dense and when
polished the amount of sealer it would absorb is negligible. Consider this
stone on a wall in a lobby and think about what stainig agents could stain this
wall.
I told him it was more important to develop a routine in
house maintenance program regarding the walls on say a quarterly basis.
They agreed.
I realize that I could have probably made some
extra bucks by telling them it had to be sealed.
What troubles me is if they did some simple research on the web they could
possibly consider that I conned them on the sealing job. I couldn't sell myself
on sealing their walls and many others I could have sealed as well but didn't.
I have a friend of mine who is a fabricator and he seals
everything in sight. He could care less if it is porous or not. We talk about
this from time to time and he doesnt care about the science behind sealing. I
have done four or five sealer removal jobs for him. He specializes in sealing
black absolute. I did one not too long ago removed alot of sealer from black
absolute, had a whole conversation(with the homeowner) about sealing
stones that aren't porous.
Wouldn't you know as we were packing up the homeowner wanted
to know if we were sealing it before we left.
So someone please tell me do we seal everything in sight and
charge for it or do we approach this in a logical scientific way based on
the requirements of every individual stone.
Our customers pay alot for our services and most of us have
survived though tough economic times.
Dont we owe our customers a square deal.
On Wed, Aug 4, 2010 at 3:59 PM, John Freitag <jfreitag@thestoneandtileschool.com>
wrote:
Barry,
There are some that feel by sealing a
polished stone it will not do anything to protect it, however I somewhat
disagree with that thought process. If you have a stone that is honed or
polished you still have open pores within the stone, even if they are small
pores they will still allow the sealer to penetrate the stone thus giving you
an extended time clean up the spill. In the restroom case sealing won’t help
much but every little bit will help..
I would still seal the stone with a
solvent based sealer.
John E. Freitag
President/Director
The Stone and Tile School
Office 407-567-7652
Cell 407-615-0134
jfreitag@thestoneandtileschool.com
From: rosen.stuart@gmail.com
[mailto:rosen.stuart@gmail.com]
On Behalf Of stuart rosen
Sent: Sunday, August 01, 2010 11:38 PM
To: Restoration and Maintenance
Subject: RE: [sccpartners] black marble/ color enhancing sealer?
Hi
Barry,
polished
black marble on a wall once restored and properly maintained will not need
to be sealed.A sealer only does one thing protect the stone against true
staining agents for a period of time. True stains will always be darker
than the stone and etch marks will always be lighter than the stone. Black
marble in an active public restroom could have the potential for lots
of etching issues. Sealing with an impregnator will do nothing to help your
customers situation.
Unless
it is honed and you would like to color enhance the surface there isnt much you
can do to protect it other than coat it in epoxy(you dont want to do that)
If
you tell us what your customer wants to accomplish these guys and gals
will offer you up some sound advice.
If you
want clarification on sealers just ask I bet you get a good amount of great
replies.
On
Sun, Aug 1, 2010 at 10:04 PM, Barry Raduta <barry@diamondstoneandtilecare.com>
wrote:
i'll
make the question simple; what sealer would you recommend? water-based,
poly or color enhancing? i really don't understand the subtle differences
between sealers and i would appreciate your collective help
thanks......barry
On
Sun, Aug 1, 2010 at 3:15 PM, Fred Hueston <fhueston@gmail.com>
wrote:
nope..wont
provide any protection at all
On
Sun, Aug 1, 2010 at 3:05 PM, <flooramor@aim.com> wrote:
Protection
against what?
J
From:
Barry Raduta <barry@diamondstoneandtilecare.com>
Sender:
stonerestorer@gmail.com
Date:
Sun, 1 Aug 2010 15:04:19 -0400
To:
Restoration and Maintenance<sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com>
ReplyTo:
"Restoration and Maintenance" <sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com>
Subject:
[sccpartners] black marble/ color enhancing sealer?
Hi
folks,
would you recommend using color enhancing sealer on a black marble wall in a
public restroom after restoration. would it provide the most protection
in this type of environment?
thanks.......barry
--
Thank You,
Barry V Raduta
Diamond Stone & Tile Care
215-816-7689
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Frederick
M. Hueston PhD
www.stoneforensics.com
www.stoneandtilepros.com
Recommended stone care products http://www.stonecarecentral.com/?Click=2149
Many of my informational articles can be found at www.thestonedude.blogspot.com
Listen
to my radio show at www.blogtalkradio.com/drfred
888-314-9077
702-314-1017
--
Thank You,
Barry V Raduta
Diamond Stone & Tile Care
215-816-7689
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Regards,
Stu Rosen
201-446-1200
www.mbstonecare.com
www.stoneshine.com
"A posse ad esse "
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Regards,
Stu Rosen
201-446-1200
www.mbstonecare.com
www.stoneshine.com
"A posse ad esse "
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--
Frederick M. Hueston PhD
www.stoneforensics.com
www.stoneandtilepros.com
Recommended stone care products http://www.stonecarecentral.com/?Click=2149
Many of my informational articles can be found at www.thestonedude.blogspot.com
Listen to my radio show at www.blogtalkradio.com/drfred
888-314-9077
702-314-1017
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list archives, subscribe, unsubscribe or change your subscription preferences
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(thread)
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