T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2549.1 | Probably will find references here and elsewhere. | EVMS::PIRULO::LEDERMAN | B. Z. Lederman | Wed Feb 19 1997 07:39 | 18 |
| There are some discussions on this topic in HOME_WORKS. You may also
find some here with a title search.
There are companies that use ozone to remove odors from houses, such as
smoke smell in a house after a fire. I suspect you will have to resort
to something like this. Check the two notes conferences (try something
like DIR /TITLE="ODOR").
Have you had the clothes laundered and/or dry cleaned? Does the smell
remain after cleaning?
Exactly what is the "furniture" involved? When you say matched
furniture I think of a sofa and chairs and can't imaging what the shelf
paper was for. Odor doesn't usually get into finished wood, but is
more likely to linger in fabric / upolstery.
Does the room have cloth curtains, and did you clean them?
|
2549.2 | dresser drawers? | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Feb 19 1997 09:43 | 9 |
| I think Jim means that his wife lined the dresser drawers with shelf
paper - not sure why anyone would want to do that anyhow. Then again,
I have allergy problems too, and I would never deliberately add
anything scented to the house that wasn't absolutely necessary. I
don't know how to get the remaining scent out, either, if leaving the
drawers out to air out after removing the paper and cleaning the
surfaces didn't work. Good luck!
/Charlotte
|
2549.3 | Thanks! | PCBUOA::BAYJ | Jim, Portables | Wed Feb 19 1997 10:23 | 30 |
| Wow! I think I'm losing my "noting" touch! I've had trouble getting
responses in other notes, but this is the first time I've obviously
failed to communicate so dramatically! Sorry!
Charlotte (hi!) is right. The furniture in question was a matched
bedroom suit, and so consisted of bureaus, etc. with drawers and
shelves for clothes. Parts of the interior shelving area is finished,
but other parts, and the interior of the drawers are not.
Her clothes got "contaminated" when she placed them in the lined
drawers. And in fact, she has had trouble getting the smell out of the
clothes even after cleaning.
The odor is mostly contained in the furniture itself. If we open the
drawers to air them, then the smell is heavy in the room, but leaving
them closed makes it livable.
I think this is one of those screwy social myths we've thrust upon
ourselves. On several occaisions my wife has asked if I'd like her to
wear perfume. And I of course answer tenderly and caringly, "Don't be
stupid - perfume gives you migraines!". But even though it bothers her
in public like in theatres when someone else has strong perfume, she
really wanted to do this.
Believe me, it will NEVER happen again. But for now...
I'll "nose" around in here and homework. Thanks!
jeb
|
2549.4 | Plain white vinegar might work. | CADSYS::HEDERSTEDT | Lisa... | Wed Feb 19 1997 10:37 | 8 |
|
I don't know if this will help with unfinished wood but after my
parents house burned the furniture refinisher told them to use
plain white vinegar to get the smell out of woodwork, walls, just
about anything. They doused everything in the house and you can't
smell any smoke smell on anything.
|
2549.5 | try bleach | SMURF::CCHAPMAN | C� | Wed Feb 19 1997 11:47 | 11 |
| In removing the 'musky' smell you sometimes find in antiques I use
bowls of Clorox Bleach in the drawers, shelves, what all. Some of the
more stubborn smells require the bleach treatment over a period of
several weeks, changing the bleach weekly. I've found the best 'bowls'
are glass cake pans -- exposing more of the bleach. Using lemon
scented bleach didn't work as you then had another smell to contend
with.
If you can stand the bleach smell -- this should do the trick.
Carel
|
2549.6 | OdorBan | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | http://www.ultranet.com/~larryv | Thu Feb 20 1997 14:26 | 8 |
|
There's a product called Odorban that works great at eliminating
odors. I buy mine at Sam's in Westboro, but I'm sure it's easy to
find. It's a liquid that neutralizes odors. We used it to eliminate
a musty odor in our clothes washer. Since, we find all kinds of uses
for it.
Rgds, Larry
|
2549.7 | Let nature do it? | EVMS::PIRULO::LEDERMAN | B. Z. Lederman | Mon Feb 24 1997 11:02 | 7 |
| The easiest thing to try is wait for a sunny day, and then take
whatever it is that needs deodorizing and place it outside where the
sun and air can get to it. Direct sunlight is best.
Of course, some things aren't light-fast, but clothing and the insides
of drawers should be.
|
2549.8 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Mon Feb 24 1997 11:32 | 6 |
|
Baking soda? Open a box and leave inside each drawer? It works for
fridges and bathrooms...
Eva
|
2549.9 | Citrus cleaner? | NETCAD::DREYER | I need a vacation!! | Wed Apr 30 1997 13:44 | 3 |
| How about the citrus cleaner they sell for wood?
Laura
|
2549.10 | | PCBUOA::mulder.ako.dec.com::bayj | Jim, portables | Wed Apr 30 1997 13:52 | 5 |
| Do you mean like lemon pledge, or something different?
jeb (still suffering)
|