That’s why they make waterless hand cleaner (GoJo, Goop, etc)
Equal parts sugar and either margarine or butter. Rub hands together. Say to dog, “hey dog, come here”. People have forgotten these old methods.
Yeah, but with some dyes and other chemicals you just have to wait for the skin to slough off. Trying to clean them with other more harsh chemicals would end up poisoning you – best to leave it alone and let friction do the job.
Everyday life. I got my hands dirty in an honest manner. Not like my hands? Get a load of my fingernails, panty ass!
After working on replacing a trunion roller on a petroleum coke calcining kiln, the ground in carbon, with the heavy oil, left my hands with a grime that had to wear off. Even concrete was stained, and steam only cleaned it enough to accept new grout. I’d never seen anything like it, and never want to again.
I remember brillo pads and borax on cut up hands back when we were dumbass kids working on cars…
For me, it was working on printing presses. Grease, oil, grime, and two different kinds of ink.
vaseline
The lunch rule: If it doesn’t come off with two washings with Lava soap, it won’t come off on your sandwich.
That’s why they make waterless hand cleaner (GoJo, Goop, etc)
Equal parts sugar and either margarine or butter. Rub hands together. Say to dog, “hey dog, come here”. People have forgotten these old methods.
Yeah, but with some dyes and other chemicals you just have to wait for the skin to slough off. Trying to clean them with other more harsh chemicals would end up poisoning you – best to leave it alone and let friction do the job.
Everyday life. I got my hands dirty in an honest manner. Not like my hands? Get a load of my fingernails, panty ass!
After working on replacing a trunion roller on a petroleum coke calcining kiln, the ground in carbon, with the heavy oil, left my hands with a grime that had to wear off. Even concrete was stained, and steam only cleaned it enough to accept new grout. I’d never seen anything like it, and never want to again.
I remember brillo pads and borax on cut up hands back when we were dumbass kids working on cars…
For me, it was working on printing presses. Grease, oil, grime, and two different kinds of ink.
vaseline
The lunch rule: If it doesn’t come off with two washings with Lava soap, it won’t come off on your sandwich.