yes
try frebreze?
You can get the smell out of a sealskin coat by hanging it up in a vinyl garment bag and then adding an open packet of ground coffee to the bottom of the bag. Zip the vinyl garment bag shut and leave for a few days to one week. Each day, stir the ground coffee remembering to close the garment bag. When the coat smells of coffee, remove it from the garment bag and hang it outside in the fresh air for a few hours. Store as usual in your wardrobe.
The stuff is basically a sticky substance. Use a butter knife or other blunt instrument to scrape the worst of it off the garment. Freezing the garment for about half an hour will help the knife remove it. If there is any residue in the garment, pretreat it with a good pretreater or antibacterial hand soap. Wash in cool water to avoid setting a possible stain. If there is a stain when the garment comes out of the wash, do not machine dry it, let it air dry. If this mild measure does not work, have the garment taken to a dry cleaners. Tell them what it is that made the stain, and they will have the proper chemical to remove it.
Yes just peel it off.
It will remove the color (bleach it) and weaken the fibers.
Knife Sandpaper Acetone
Goo Gone will remove almost any sticky label without hurting the wood.
So people know what it is and that it's dangerous.
There are various methods, but if the silk is part of a good garment or furnishing I'd take it to a drycleaner.
form_title= Designer Wallpaper form_header= Install designer wallpaper in your home. What designers are you most interested in?*= _ [50] What color wallpaper do you want?*= _ [50] Do you need to remove old wallpaper?*= () Yes () No
They sell products called "label lifters" that do the job.
In order to remove an oil stain from clothing you pretreat the stain and then you wash the garment in hot water. Pretreatment involves blotting up as much of the stain as you can with a clean paper towel, and then following the directions on a commercial pretreatment. You can find pretreatments wherever you buy detergent, and the labels will let you know if they work best on a particular type of stain.