Marks appear on walls from two main sources: hands and airborne particles. Grubby little fingers and fireplaces are prime suspects. Here is a step-by-step guide to washing walls.
July 28, 2015
Marks appear on walls from two main sources: hands and airborne particles. Grubby little fingers and fireplaces are prime suspects. Here is a step-by-step guide to washing walls.
Use a lamb's wool duster, or to reach higher spots and ceilings wrap a microfibre dust cloth or clean, white cloth around a broom and dust with that.
Wash walls that are painted or covered with vinyl paper with any of the following mixtures:
• 250 ml (1 cup) of borax (available from supermarkets) and 30 ml (2 tbs) of dishwashing liquid in 4 litres (4 quarts) of warm water.
•250 ml (1 cup)(available from supermarkets), 5 ml (1 tsp) of dishwashing liquid and 4 litres (4 quarts)of water.
• If you're washing before applying new paint, a good cleaner to use is sugar soap, available from hardware and paint stores. Keep the cleaning solution in one bucket and plain water for rinsing in another. To protect the floor, use a drop cloth.
When arms are raised wrap rags around your wrists and hold them on with rubber bands.
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