I had an oil based solvent soak into my granite countertop. It was an area 12 inches x 12 inches. I tried many other "home remedies" found on you tube, most of which made the spot expand!! Baking soda did not work. God bless you this one actually worked!! I had to do four applications but it worked. Spot is gone! Thank you thank you thank you!!
Guys! Somehow my oil leaked underneath the wood saucer I keep it on and stained my granite like 8”. I tried everything in all combinations; bleach, vinegar, acetone, baking soda… over last 4 days which did nothing. This got the whole thing out! IM SO GRATEFUL FOR THIS VIDEO!
Hi, I have made several attempts to remove 2 stains with no luck. If anything, it is spreading and getting darker. How many times did you try this process until it worked? I have new granite and can't believe this is stained already.
Below are the step-by-step instructions how to remove oil marks from your countertop: • To create the paste needed for this task, you will need the following ingredients: Hairdresser peroxide #20 (this is stronger than typical household peroxide and is available at most hair salons), flour and water. • Using a utensil, combine in a mixing bowl equal amounts of peroxide and warm water. Add flour as needed to mix into a consistent paste. The paste should not be too runny, having the consistency of icing or a little thinner than peanut butter. • Apply the paste to the oil spots, covering the whole affected area a little beyond the edges of the stain. Spread it evenly keeping the paste thick enough that you cannot see the counter underneath, about 1/8 of an inch thick. • Cover the paste with plastic wrap, creating a seal to prevent it from drying out. Applying masking tape along the edges of the plastic wrap can create a better seal, preventing the paste from drying out. The peroxide needs time to break down the oil so the flour can remove it from the stone. • Let the paste and plastic wrap sit over-night. • Remove the plastic wrap. • Using a cloth, remove the paste from the countertop. The stone should be darker under the paste as the moisture from the mixture has been sitting on top. • Rinse the counter with a damp cloth, removing any remnants of the paste, and dry, wiping away any excess water. • Let the counter dry for the next 24 hours.
Will household peroxide work or do I have to use hair dressers? And can it be any type of flour? Update: this worked! Thank you so much. I had to do like 3 rounds but, it worked! Never delete this video lol
i put dishwashing soap and i cover it with plastic for 2 to 3 days after i put towel with very hot water for awail 3 or 4 times and i clean it very well with hot water and towel and let it dry the olive oil stain completely disappear .
I will let you know what I purchased in case it helps you or others. I don't think the Walmart/drugstore kind is strong enough because it is pretty watered down. (Ours for cleaning scrapes/minor cuts is 97% water!) I picked up a bottle from a beauty supply store, like he mentioned, and my label looks similar to his. An employee showed me what to get and said a lot of people buy it for my purpose (an oil stain on granite). My label reads "Salon Care Professional, 20 volume clear, regular lift." The ingredients are: water, hydrogen peroxide, and phosphoric acid. Caution: it says it can cause permanent eye damage, and keep it from your skin and clothes. I will give it a try and hopefully be back to share good results!
+CRS Granite & Cabinets Thank you, I will look for stone wax. I am trying to remove oil from my granite with baking soda and water paste. I came across this after I mixed up my paste. If that doesn't help I will be using your method for sure. Do you recommend a certain brand of sealer and wax?
+April Tatum I recommend you visit our website to read up on how to remove oil marks by click on the following link: crsgranite.ca/Products/Countertops/Granite_Countertops/Granite_CareAlso, I recommend you contact Granquarz (www.granquartz.com - USA) or (www.granquartz.ca - Canada) who are the largest stone care distributor in North America. I'm confident they will be able to help you with all your care products needs.
My granite as turned darker on all the areas I clean daily. Things that I have on the counter that I don't move much, like my hand mixer, toaster oven, cutting board , when removing all these items the granite is the original color underneath...lighter...can I use this technique peroxide flour water for this? I was going to go with another suggestion of acetone instead of peroxide. But I would much rather work with peroxide, less fumes....it is a large area I would have to do.would you recommend we try it?? Or have something that might work better?? Please please please help us WE NEED YOU! If you have a minute can you let me know what,other treatmemts tried to be true and tested. I would so greatly appreciate it. Thank you so munch! Lori
If your counter turns a darker colour when you apply water, it usually means the sealer is no longer working to prevent oil or pollutants from entering the stone. If the cleaning rag has oil in it, you are likely spreading the oil over the unsealed surface areas which is common problem. The thicker the granite and the longer the oil sits on the surface, the harder it is to remove. The goal is to breakdown the oil, then pull it with an absorbent material. The higher the concentration of hydrogen peroxide the better, combined with water and flour. Acetone does not work. If the oil has been sitting in the stone for a long time, it will likely take weeks and dozens of applications to remove it. To learn more about granite care go to www.crsgranite.ca/care-warranty
CRS Granite & Cabinets Thank you so much for your timely reply even though it was depressing! Would you suggest darkening the light spots then to match the rest of the granite an then seal again? If so, How would that best be done? Baby oil?
@@crsremodeling1 I have watched a lot of videos, you seem to have the best feel for it. Weeks and dozens of applications...ok, that explains my issue, thanks. I had some backsplash pieces out in the backyard for a few years and they are stained by where they touched the ground.
I had an oil based solvent soak into my granite countertop. It was an area 12 inches x 12 inches. I tried many other "home remedies" found on you tube, most of which made the spot expand!! Baking soda did not work. God bless you this one actually worked!! I had to do four applications but it worked. Spot is gone! Thank you thank you thank you!!
4 applications over 4 nights, or did you reapply every certain no. Of hours?
I am having the same issue
Guys! Somehow my oil leaked underneath the wood saucer I keep it on and stained my granite like 8”. I tried everything in all combinations; bleach, vinegar, acetone, baking soda… over last 4 days which did nothing. This got the whole thing out! IM SO GRATEFUL FOR THIS VIDEO!
Ps I only had 30 vol and it still worked.
Hi, I have made several attempts to remove 2 stains with no luck. If anything, it is spreading and getting darker. How many times did you try this process until it worked?
I have new granite and can't believe this is stained already.
Thank you been working with granite for along time this process is a lifesaver
Spatulas are good for stirring and spreading stuff from the bowl .
I've seen other videos and they take off the wrap after a few hours and let it dry and brush it off. Does it not matter doing it one way vs the other?
We've had a BBQ counter top made with Quartzite and there is a stain along one edge from the glue that was during construction.. will this help ?
What is the powder he mixed ?
Below are the step-by-step instructions how to remove oil marks from your countertop:
• To create the paste needed for this task, you will need the following ingredients: Hairdresser peroxide #20 (this is stronger than typical household peroxide and is available at most hair salons), flour and water.
• Using a utensil, combine in a mixing bowl equal amounts of peroxide and warm water. Add flour as needed to mix into a consistent paste. The paste should not be too runny, having the consistency of icing or a little thinner than peanut butter.
• Apply the paste to the oil spots, covering the whole affected area a little beyond the edges of the stain. Spread it evenly keeping the paste thick enough that you cannot see the counter underneath, about 1/8 of an inch thick.
• Cover the paste with plastic wrap, creating a seal to prevent it from drying out. Applying masking tape along the edges of the plastic wrap can create a better seal, preventing the paste from drying out. The peroxide needs time to break down the oil so the flour can remove it from the stone.
• Let the paste and plastic wrap sit over-night.
• Remove the plastic wrap.
• Using a cloth, remove the paste from the countertop. The stone should be darker under the paste as the moisture from the mixture has been sitting on top.
• Rinse the counter with a damp cloth, removing any remnants of the paste, and dry, wiping away any excess water.
• Let the counter dry for the next 24 hours.
Will household peroxide work or do I have to use hair dressers? And can it be any type of flour?
Update: this worked! Thank you so much. I had to do like 3 rounds but, it worked! Never delete this video lol
Did you use household peroxide or hair dressers?
Hairdresser peroxide is much stronger than household
What kind of sealant and wax would you recommend?
Hi. Can I use peroxide for hair dye? Thank you.
i put dishwashing soap and i cover it with plastic for 2 to 3 days after i put towel with very hot water for awail 3 or 4 times and i clean it very well with hot water and towel and let it dry the olive oil stain completely disappear .
What kind of dish-washing soap? Dawn? what color is your granite? I have a dark granite charcoal and black with silver specks.
Celeste Stricklin Did you try this ?? Ik it was a year ago but I got oil in my counter and my moms almost home !😭
can i buy it from walmart the regalur brown bottle or i need a particular kind
I will let you know what I purchased in case it helps you or others. I don't think the Walmart/drugstore kind is strong enough because it is pretty watered down. (Ours for cleaning scrapes/minor cuts is 97% water!)
I picked up a bottle from a beauty supply store, like he mentioned, and my label looks similar to his. An employee showed me what to get and said a lot of people buy it for my purpose (an oil stain on granite).
My label reads "Salon Care Professional, 20 volume clear, regular lift." The ingredients are: water, hydrogen peroxide, and phosphoric acid.
Caution: it says it can cause permanent eye damage, and keep it from your skin and clothes.
I will give it a try and hopefully be back to share good results!
Well possibly Did it work?
@Well_possibly 6 years late but that Rusk deepshine 20 is 3% as well. Walmart hydrogen peroxide is the same thing
What would you wax it with? Auto paste wax?
+April Tatum Stone wax is recommended, furniture wax second.. I never tried auto wax, so it's hard to say if it works better
+CRS Granite & Cabinets Thank you, I will look for stone wax. I am trying to remove oil from my granite with baking soda and water paste. I came across this after I mixed up my paste. If that doesn't help I will be using your method for sure. Do you recommend a certain brand of sealer and wax?
+April Tatum I recommend you visit our website to read up on how to remove oil marks by click on the following link: crsgranite.ca/Products/Countertops/Granite_Countertops/Granite_CareAlso, I recommend you contact Granquarz (www.granquartz.com - USA) or (www.granquartz.ca - Canada) who are the largest stone care distributor in North America. I'm confident they will be able to help you with all your care products needs.
I will definitely try this method and provide feedback
How did it work?
how do you get water and soap stains out? same way?
Please send a picture of the issue to service@crsremodeling.ca and we'll go from there
Thank you for this video!
do you wax or seal first?
Seal first, then wax if needed.
Would baking soda work as well?
flour works better..
@@crsremodeling1 any flour?
My granite as turned darker on all the areas I clean daily. Things that I have on the counter that I don't move much, like my hand mixer, toaster oven, cutting board , when removing all these items the granite is the original color underneath...lighter...can I use this technique peroxide flour water for this? I was going to go with another suggestion of acetone instead of peroxide. But I would much rather work with peroxide, less fumes....it is a large area I would have to do.would you recommend we try it?? Or have something that might work better?? Please please please help us WE NEED YOU! If you have a minute can you let me know what,other treatmemts tried to be true and tested. I would so greatly appreciate it. Thank you so munch!
Lori
If your counter turns a darker colour when you apply water, it usually means the sealer is no longer working to prevent oil or pollutants from entering the stone. If the cleaning rag has oil in it, you are likely spreading the oil over the unsealed surface areas which is common problem. The thicker the granite and the longer the oil sits on the surface, the harder it is to remove. The goal is to breakdown the oil, then pull it with an absorbent material. The higher the concentration of hydrogen peroxide the better, combined with water and flour. Acetone does not work. If the oil has been sitting in the stone for a long time, it will likely take weeks and dozens of applications to remove it. To learn more about granite care go to www.crsgranite.ca/care-warranty
CRS Granite & Cabinets Thank you so much for your timely reply even though it was depressing! Would you suggest darkening the light spots then to match the rest of the granite an then seal again? If so, How would that best be done? Baby oil?
Hi Lori, I have exactly same problem. How did you go at the end, have you stained the rest to match or tried to remove the dark areas? Thanks
@@crsremodeling1 I have watched a lot of videos, you seem to have the best feel for it. Weeks and dozens of applications...ok, that explains my issue, thanks. I had some backsplash pieces out in the backyard for a few years and they are stained by where they touched the ground.
@@crsremodeling1 If you say "the higher the concentration the better", why add water at all?
That stuff he is using is to lighten hair
How to get this product
What's the point of getting high concentration h2o2 if you are going to dilute it? Lol
That’s what I just said it doesn’t make any sense he basically diluted it down to five volume
Please tell me which thing u mixed in it powder like....product name plz
Good tip thanks and for future reference please use some other finger to point out.😊