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Thread: Anyone ever read the warning label on paste waxes?

  1. #1
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    Anyone ever read the warning label on paste waxes?

    At 56, I may be a gonner.

    I was was taught our craft by my grandfather. We always used our hands or rags for waxing. Tonight while waxing my planes with bare fingers I looked at the warning label on the Belken can. It states" may be harmful if absorbed by skin. Contains turpentine which can cause kidney and bladder damage.

    so I look over at the minwax paste wax can. " delayed effects from long term overexposure: contains solvents that can cause permanent brain and nervous system damage"

    wow! I'm not blaming them but I know that warning wasn't on the cans I started on. Do you all wear gloves when waxing? If I have to I may just start scraping rust off rather that wax.

    jeez, hope to live long enough to see the replies.
    Last edited by mark kosse; 11-14-2015 at 9:52 PM.

  2. #2
    Toxic absorbsion through skin is a real thing. Think about nicotine patches and other dermal medicines. But I suspect you'd have to be immersing your hand in that wax all day long to be impacted.

    Unless you live in California, of course.

  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by mark kosse View Post
    At 56, I may be a gonner.

    I was was taught our craft by my grandfather. We always used our hands or rags for waxing. Tonight while waxing my planes with bare fingers I looked at the warning label on the Belken can. It states" may be harmful if absorbed by skin. Contains turpentine which can cause kidney and bladder damage.

    so I look over at the minwax paste wax can. " delayed effects from long term overexposure: contains solvents that can cause permanent brain and nervous system damage"

    wow! I'm not blaming them but I know that warning wasn't on the cans I started on. Do you all wear gloves when waxing? If I have to I may just start scraping rust off rather that wax.

    jeez, hope to live long enough to see the replies.
    When I first began work in the cabinet shop, all of our finishes (stains, paints, sealer & topcoat) were lacquer based. The only way to get it off, particularly the stain, was to wash our hands with lacquer thinner. Pretty sure that didn't do me a whole lot of good.

  4. #4
    I do not particularly like a smell of the paste wax, so I stopped using it. I once read somewhere that we should trust our noses if they do not like the smell.
    Nitrile disposable glove 100 packs are about $10 on Amazon and last forever so I wear those when needed.

  5. #5
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    I wear gloves.
    "A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".


    – Samuel Butler

  6. #6
    You have nothing to worry about ...twitch twitch

    I use the pad that came with mine, the only thing that touches the wax is my thumb, and that's really only the older wax that's been on the pad, the fresh wax is always on the other side of where my thumb is. Then I wipe down with a paper towel.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by Leo Graywacz View Post
    You have nothing to worry about ...twitch twitch.
    thats funny!

    those wax cans have sat on my desk for many years. I was kinda shocked when I read it. I have hft nitrile gloves but they fall apart when I use some chemicals like stain. Anyone know if the ones on amazon are better?

    like Roy I always used paint thinner, kerosene and mineral spirits by hand. Maybe it's time to start thinking different.

  8. #8
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    Just be glad you don't live in California. Anything that is man made causes cancer there.

  9. #9
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    If you want to live a long and healthy life you need to stop breathing because that is giving you cancer.

    Seriously, how many of you grew up in a house with lead paint, asbestos flooring, or lead pipes? Did the cars not spew lead in their vapors? Did you play with mercury in the palm of your hand? Did you buy the lies and start using margarine instead of butter and skip the eggs?

    I'm not suggesting we all start bathing in toxic substances, just that fools and their lawsuits have made this country so jumpy we now have to warn people that hot coffee is hot. Take sensible precautions if you work with such substances for a living, but the occasional exposure over the years won't be the death of you*.




    *Follow this advice at your own risk as the author is not a medical professional and these claims have not been evaluated by the FDA or the Surgeon General. Reading this post on an electronic device may cause eye strain and is known to cause retinal cancer in the state of California.
    Last edited by Steve Meliza; 11-15-2015 at 11:49 AM.

  10. #10
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    In my youth gloves were seldom used with anything from paint thinners to gasoline. When I started working as a silk screen printer, we used some much stronger materials. I started wearing heavy gloves most of the time. Now I wear gloves when painting, but not for most of my waxing. Maybe I will have to start wearing gloves.

    jtk
    "A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
    - Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)

  11. #11
    Well,the moon doesn't seem to be hurt and it is often waxing. But I guess it is not entirely unphased....

  12. #12
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    Did the label mention the part about not driving or operating heavy machinery while applying paste wax to furniture?

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mel Fulks View Post
    Well,the moon doesn't seem to be hurt and it is often waxing. But I guess it is not entirely unphased....

    Good one Mel. Or I guess that was two good ones.

  14. #14
    Well,thank you Jim. I neglected to mention the moon is an "orbital buffer" whose waxing sometimes blocks damaging ultra violet rays.

  15. #15
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    Let me see.......
    Benzene, acetone, carbon tetrachloride, muriatic acid, red meat, denatured alcohol, and all the other stuff I was using as a young adult is gonna kill me SOME DAY.
    Where is my cigar?
    Bill
    On the other hand, I still have five fingers.

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