Wine stain in Travertine

Ray Burnfield

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Ray Burnfield
winestain.png
We came across this at a high end hotel. We're not sure what they tried before to take it out.
We tried a poultice and it didn't do anything.
Any other ideas?
 
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Cameron DeMille

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cameron demille
that's limestone and it's probably set in there really well.

what poultice did you try? There are a dozen or more popular formulations and you need to use the right one. Natural tannins like wine, coffee, leaves, etc. require a fairly strong hydrogen peroxide mix. 40 volume from hair salon supply stores, i think 6-9% HP. If you do it correctly, it will come out.

You can try bleach and warm water, NOT as a poultice, but agitate it and let it sit for a bit. start with 50/50
 
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J Scott W

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Jeffrey Scott Warrington
I have removed wine from travertine using a large dose of StainZONE (which is an oxidizer that includes peroxide) and then covering with a poultice.
 

Cameron DeMille

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cameron demille
I don't know what the proper term is, but it basically is a chemical burn. It happens with various chemicals to certain stones. It gets chalky and white. Depending on the stone, it can be fixed most of the time.
 
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GeneMiller

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gene miller
you have to be careful when you throw out "bleach". Bleach by itself, sitting there long enough will damage the stone.
I would always start light and watch it closely. I never knew it would hurt the stone.

Gene
 

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