I recently bout those crayons that kids can draw with in the tub. It said i could easly remove them .?
Question:I cant get that off my tub at all, does anyone know what would take that off my tub and shower.I have tried that magic eraser and it wont budge. any info would help.I feel like writing that company and tell them what it did to my shower..
Answers:
I buy those all the time and have never had trouble with them when it comes to clean up. The package dose say not to use on certain types of showers or older showres as they could stain. But there is a cheap cleaner I buy at wal mart that I swear can remove anything so you might give it a try..its called scrub free.
You should write to the company. For one thing they can tell you what product to use to remove their product, and if all else fails save their response and sue for the cost of a new shower.
Try alcohol. If that doesn't work go to your hardware and ask for some acetone. That will do it for sure. Paint thinner should also work.
I would defiantly write to the company!! I wouldn't try anything to abrasive, or anything that could hurt the finish of your shower, assuming it is shiny fiberglass.
Personally I wouldn't buy them at all. Its like teaching your kids its OK to write on walls regaurdless of in the tub or out.
If the crayons are of an oil base/ or wax paint thinner will work- if the shower is fiberglass or plastic i would be careful on using alcohol or acetone they will burn/melt the unit- paint thinner will not.--- Neil // Munro products
You should write them,and tell them you think the product is defective.
They should be able to tell you what will make it come off.
If what they told you doesn't work,I'd sue for the cost of having to get a new bathtub,bathroom,or whatever it is that you can't get it off of.
I had the same thing happen when my grandson used them in our bathtub. I had to scrub the tile with a brush and Comet to get the mess off the grout. If you have a fiberglass tub, you might try Soft Scrub.
You should definitely call or write the company that manufactured the crayons and let them know what happened.
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