ANSWERS: 10
  • The only thing I've found that gets that stuff out is time, or scissors, or both. I think they ought to rename it "great at not coming off of whatever you happen to get it on - ever!"
  • Well for hands i used brillo pads, but this is very painful, if you want a painless solution you can use gasoline or kerosene, just rub it on your hands, not alot though. For your hair wash it and brush/comb it throughly, this worked for me. As for the clothes I don't think you can get it out, because i got it on my Northface and my jeans, and i tried washing it and it's ruined, sorry. :(
  • I just got a good chunk out of the ends of my already short hair! I did NOT want to cut my hair any shorter, so I tried the shampoo and comb idea and IT WORKED! It takes a lot of shampooing while combing and scraping the stuff out, but with enough perseverence it will come out. For my skin, I used a pumice stone from Walmart and it works perfectly. But clothes I've had no luck with - just wear something old or make those your new work clothes. Thank you for the idea!
  • u better pray~~~~~~~
  • Ah the goodness of olive oil... I was recently working on the belly boards of my trailer house and got a lot of great stuff in my hair. I tried using just regular conditioner to get it out, and sadly nothing happened, so I went to the extremes of using extra virgin olive oil and letting it soak in my hair for about 10 to 15 minutes... I then went and broke apart the big pieces and went through it with a fine toothed comb, and by some miracle it actually worked! I don't know if the olive oil ate through the great stuff or just made it slip off, but in the process of combing through my hair all of the great stuff that was on my skin came off too, with very little effort... as a matter of fact all I did after combing my hair was take a shower and all the stuff was gone! easy as 1, 2, 3... I'd suggest this method over anything else due to the ease of it's workload.
  • Me and my dumbshit motherfucker friend tried gasoline on our hands and hair. all it did was make us smell like ultimate shit. dont ever do it, trust me. its still on my hands after two weeks. i think it might superadhere it. good luck buddy!
  • My Fiancee soaked his hands in hot water,(AS HOT AS YOU CAN STAND IT) with a little Ajax Liquid Dish Soap for about an hour or so and then used a pumice and it came off fairly easy.
  • If you ran to the computer at the instant it hit your head, then acetone will dissolve it (as per the label). RUN to Home Depot before it sets. If, however, your GS has 'cured', then my only answer is patience. I gave it a few days of showers, letting the follicles soak in water (and olive oil) before I had at it. Then, when in the law library for hour on end reading, I would use my fingernails to separate strands into 10 - 20 strand clumps before using one hand to tense the clump while pulling my fingernails up the strand to slide the crap off the set of strands. If one side bends and the other remains tensed, the tensed ones are freed. Go back and work on the bent ones. It took me about 5 hours total to remove the equivalent of a gob the size of a golf ball that had fallen onto my head about two inches above my right ear. YOU WILL LOSE SOME HAIR DOING THIS. Sometimes you'll find the best COA is to just pull a clump out as there is too much of the shite there to deal with and there are only a few strands holding in a much larger 'baloon' clump up top. I lost a completely unnoticeable amount (remember, you lose 100 strands a day by natural attrition / replenishment). I'm none the worse for wear and don't expect any permanent damage from pulling out a few clumps once in my life. Good luck with it.
  • THIS STUFF IS THE BOMB www.naturesfresh.net hope it helps
  • I got it on my hands Saturday and it dried before I got to the acetone. The next day I spent some time in the pool, enough to get my fingers 'wrinkly' and the Great Stuff rubbed off pretty easily. It didn't come off of my fingernails, but having it off of my fingers and arm feels so much better. So try soaking it in water for a couple hours, better known as swimming.

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