M.G. asks from Bronx, NY on February 11, 2008
How Do I Clean This?
We bought our daughters an unfinished wooden bunkbed bedroom set. My 8 year old son decided to mark up a section of the furniture with a black permanent marker. The room is small, so we can't reposition the furniture. It's in plain view once you walk into the room. I don't want to paint it a dark color. Any suggestions on the best way I can remove it with minimal further damage?
More Answers
D. answers from New York on February 13, 2008
I'm sure your gonna love my response. There really is nothing you can do. I has sunken into the wood. You can try to sand it out but there is no way of knowing how deep it goes. As for the painting thing. No paint will cover permanet marker. My sister has a friend who is a contractor and some clients went through their new (being built) house with a bright red sharpie circling all the mistakes. Not to bright because he told them that all that dry wall needed to be removed and replaced because they were idiots. So the only thing you can really try is sanding. I don't think that the Mister Clean sponges will work on untreated wood.
S.G. answers from New York on February 12, 2008
rubbing alcohol and a sponge may do the trick. also, i've seen them do paint tricks with denatured alcohol. that may work, too. i'd google 'permanent marker removal'
M.K. answers from New York on February 12, 2008
You can try Bon Ami. It's gentle and shouldn't damage the wood. (plus it's not a heavy chemical like the Magic Eraser) It really helped us get the red sharpie off the counters, sinks, walls, tables....that our own little Picasso created.
Good luck!
L.H. answers from New York on February 11, 2008
Hi M.,
i find that the mr clean easer sponges are amazing i use them to clean everything in my house markers crayons etc they work wonders
M.N. answers from New York on February 12, 2008
Magic eraser sponges may do the trick, but keep in mind it will give a toddlers skin a nasty chemical burn if they get ahold of it... You can go to home depot and the paint department ask the counter clerk for a product that covers or removes paint and marker.. I know they have it because I purchased it from there I forgot the name though.
Here is a link with some tips too.http://www.mrscleannw.com/tips/remove-marker-stains.html
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/484015/ways_to_r...
D.B. answers from Binghamton on February 12, 2008
The scare about the sponges burning kids has never been backed up by real evidence. Check out:
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/chemical-burns/AN01706
You can't believe everything you read on the internet without checking it out first. A good site to check out whether something is a hoax is:
http://hoaxbusters.ciac.org/
As for the marker, sanding it out might work if it didn't penetrate too deeply. Last resort - work the design into a larger design and decorate the whole thing!
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