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Lemonxxs

New member
Alright I love woman but the lipstick has got to go.



How do you get lipstick out of cloth sun visors?



Thank god she is beautiful or else she would be torn from the black book!
 
O come on........





How did it get there!! :p



Inquiring minds want to know!





I've used dry cleaning fluid once.....worked for me. Test it first somewhere else of course!! But then again, that was on a shirt collar, not a sun visor!!!! :eek:
 
You know how they (WOMAN) apply it. Then they touch edges of lips to ... heck I dont know what they do.



But when she closed the mirrror and than puched it back up WHAMMMMMMMO a dagger through my heart. Lipstick!



GRRRRRRRRR.
 
I imagine that many lipsticks have different chemical make-up but I once removed lipstick by scrubbing with a soft toothbrush dipped in a Dawn dishwashing/water solution. End up by scrubbing with plain water.



I won't mention where the stain was.
 
WD-40 works great on crayon or lipstick stains on clothing that can be washed in the wash machine. The WD-40 would get the lipstick stain out but then you would have a WD-40 stain, unless you can take the cloth off the visor, wash it and put it back on.
 
Thanks for all the advice.



I have heard Lighter fluid may get it out but I will go by David's link. If forgot about that one on autopia site. Good memory David.
 
How many of ya'll wear eye protection? Yeah - me neither. But, today I watched as a eye specialist scraped and cut a scar off the cornea of my wife's right eye. It was disturbing to see (20" color monitor) but amazing too, after the scar was gone, he used a laser to smooth the area for healing and we hope the cornea will get back in the right shape. The scar had distorted it so bad that glasses and contacts were ineffective. The thing had appeared years ago and she didn't remember any injury, but as she got older, it started making her vision terrible.

She's doing fine now, I have been good about getting her 4 different drops and 3 types of meds in at the right time. The doctor stressed - don't be a hero, take your meds and don't give pain a chance to start. I like that guy! I'm a believer in preventing discomfort, and from the other doctor at the center told me - that operation is big time pain.

I'm going to get some safety glasses before the next detail, maybe ya'll should to.

Jimmy
 
Hey Jimmy... glad she's doing OK!!!

I was a construction manager, so safety glasses were always required on every jobsite for the last 30 years! I wear glasses, so they have safety lenses in them, but no side shields... probably should!
 
Jimmy - to add to that I would also recommend using something over your hands when using chemicals (degreasers, etc.) as they will damage the skin with long term exposure.
 
I have a freind who works at the leading eye surgery center here :spy:

She see's this stuff day in and day out. She was telling me 1 day about a constuction worker who had accidentally hit the trigger on his "Industrial Strenght" nail gun and it shot straight into his marble :scared:

I have 3 or 4 nice pair of safety glasses. Unfortunately, the only time I wear them is when I'm running my weed wacker. Good thing I have a freind at the Surgery Center :cornut:
 
I wear eye glasses because when my son was two his right eye began to turn in. They tried the patch, eye glasses, etc, but he still had to have surgery. He has to wear glasses now or his eye could continue to turn in. As such I now where my glasses all the time since him and I are a team. I like wearing them for a detail, although they may not be the best over all choice.
 
I started wearing glasses in the 7th grade, back in the '70's, after my PRK in 1998, I discovered I needed safety glasses when I cut grass and run the weedeater. The regular glasses had protected my eyes and I had just got use to it. My vision was pretty bad, 20-250 and 20-300, with the PRK I went to 20-15 and 20-25, it was really neat to see my feet clearly in the shower. It's been 11.5 years and they've slipped to 20-25, 20-35, and my reading vision is not perfect anymore. After seeing my wife's operation, I'm not taking any chances!

Todd, keep getting your son regular check-ups and if you get a bad vibe, don't hesitate to get a second opinion, we did, and my wife finally got the excellant care she deserved.
 
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