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Two cleaning questions...

First, the whiteish linoleum floor on the bathroom floor of my apartment has some yellow stains that seem to be from a reaction to something and the bath mat that covered them. Anyone know how to get those off?

Second, we have white walls in the apartment and I am looking for the best way to cover old nail and other hanging holes.

2006-12-28 11:36:18 · 11 answers · asked by Trotppr71 1 in Home & Garden Maintenance & Repairs

11 answers

Water-Bleach mixture on your bathroom floors
Go to the hardware store & get hole filler for your walls or White Toothpaste (Colgate) works too.

2006-12-28 11:38:34 · answer #1 · answered by Jo 6 · 0 0

Unfortunately it is from your rubber backing on the mat. There is nothing to clean it. It will have to be replaced when you move out and you may be charged, depending on how old the vinyl is, you would be prorated from the time it was installed.

The best thing to use on your walls is sheetrock mud. Hardware stores usually have small tubs of this and is usually called joint compound. Use your finger to fill the small holes and then wipe away the excess. Virtually undetectable.

I have been in the apartment industry for almost 20 years.
We actually have an addendum added to our lease stating not to use rubber backed rugs in the kitchens or bathrooms.

Good luck.

2006-12-28 11:50:04 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"tweenthelines" is unquestionably on objective... sparkling each and every thing out, then bypass decrease back and kick butt at the position. once you haul your stuff away, be particular and leave in the back of any cleansing substances - vacuum, broom & dustpan, rags, cleansers, buckets, etc. so that you'll have each and every thing you want. As you sparkling, end a room at a time, close em up, and bypass on. also, if the position has carpet, and also you've youthful ones or pets, or you smoke, lease a carpet shampooer! attempt to fix damage in case you may - patch holes, replace outlet covers, etc. do not forget information like washing out drawers and cabinets, washing & putting the curtains, mowing in case you had a backyard... "toubab" has a effective theory too... in case you may convince a minimum of two or 3 friends that can help you you, artwork is going speedier and that's more desirable relaxing. all and sundry might want to do all of one problem (Jill washes the walls, Jan cleans the flooring, John washes the domicile windows, etc.) or you would possibly want to commerce off jobs to circumvent boredom. you've pizza delivered for a lunch smash, and performance the full position done in some hours. also, convey alongside a radio, tape participant, or cd participant, and play some upbeat music. It facilitates energize you and makes the time and the artwork fly through. :)

2016-10-16 22:12:49 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

For the floor question: Try regular floor cleaner. If that doesn't work, try Mr. Clean's Magic Eraser. It gets almost anything out.

For the walls: They make stuff that is especially for filling nail holes. You can get it at Wal-mart or any hardware type store. It comes in a container that looks like toothpaste.

2006-12-28 11:39:29 · answer #4 · answered by Dawn S 3 · 0 0

Don't think you can fix the floor, it is probably too far gone.

I like a vinyl based spakling compound made specifically for fixing nail holes in walls. Most lumberyards carry it. It doesn't shrink when it drys like the regular joint compound. The key is to paint over it after you are done so it disappears. You will probably need to paint the entire wall, because of dirt and fading.

2006-12-28 11:44:03 · answer #5 · answered by DSM Handyman 5 · 0 0

1) It comes from using a bath mat. Sadly, there's very little you can do. Try Comet or bleach and plenty of scrubbing. However, it's normal wear for your apartment and you should not be charged.

2) Toothpaste (white) works best.

2006-12-28 11:39:07 · answer #6 · answered by FaZizzle 7 · 0 0

You might be able to use CLR to get rid of the spots on the floor, and you can use spackling compound to cover the holes in the wall.

2006-12-28 11:39:19 · answer #7 · answered by jakejc795 3 · 0 0

Cover the holes using a plaster... Like a drywall plaster. The plaster doesn't give you a perfect finish, but if you paint over it, it is fine. You may want to sand paper the project afterwards to give it a nice smooth finish.

I don't know if you can fix linoleum, you may have to replace it...

2006-12-28 11:38:21 · answer #8 · answered by theVisionary 4 · 0 0

I would try the Mr. Clean Magic Eraser for the floors...it will clean anything
I am assuming that your landlord will probably do the repair on the walls...our landlord said they actually preferred to do it because then they knew it would be done right

2006-12-28 11:39:29 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Spackle for the holes. I'm not sure about the floor. Those will probably be there for good.

2006-12-28 11:38:31 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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