
It looks great in the picture, and even better in real life, where you are not focusing on staring at imperfections. Twenty minutes after applying this product and wiping it off, I can't complain at all about the results. The cabinets are 15-year-old cherry-stained hard work cabinets (oak, maybe?) and are scratched deeply in certain parts from the previous owner's dogs. Just tried this stuff on one of our kitchen cabinets and it really did a nice job. Promising review: "Very impressed so far. For use on antiques, dining tables, kitchen cabinets, wood doors and trim, etc. Highly recommend!" - MarissaĮnhances the natural beauty and depth of grain on finished *and* unfinished wood. Over all very pleased and impressed so far.

I haven’t tried it on rust yet so we’ll see how that goes. It works amazing so far! No overpowering smell (barely any smell at all), easy to use, and a little product goes a long way. The texture feels similar to when you mix honey with sugar to make a lip scrub, except it’s super fine grit and more pasty like putty or clay.

I noticed it really does remove mineral build up, but it takes a lot of elbow grease and repetitive applications before you start seeing progress. It removed hard water stains from my sinks and faucets. Needless to say I’m very impressed! It removed stubborn mold and grime from my shower tile grout with use of a hard bristle tooth brush. Of course I caved and had to try it for myself. Everyone on social media was talking about how amazing this product was for cleaning around the house and I just thought they were all jumping on some kind of band wagon. Promising review: "Honestly I was very skeptical when I first purchased.

I tried it first on my Le Creuset cast-iron pan (seen above, right) and really was amazed at how just one pass with The Pink Stuff (and a scouring brush) took off almost every stain! I can't wait to try it on literally everything in my home that needs a deep cleaning." Honestly, wow! It really does work wonders. I'm just sayin.My colleague Heather Braga swears by this stuff: "After hearing what incredible things The Pink Stuff can do, I finally ordered it and tried it for myself. Or, go ahead and spend $20 bucks on this product, but then face the reality when you stare at yourself in the mirror and then at the toilet bowl and then back at yourself and can't help yourself thinking deep down, "What a looser I was just scammed out of $20! My girlfriend is never gonna let this go." It's a bad feeling, bruh. The result will be every bit as sparkling white as you see in the BowlSparkle ad, hands down.

Pour just a couple of table spoonfuls of the beach in the bowl and let it sit for an hour. Or maybe if you had know idea that there about a million products that you can purchase in any supermarket that will clean just as good as this BowlSparkle nonsense, you might be coned out of that kind of cash, but in fact, get yourself a gallon on ordinary, no-brand bleach - the cheapest you can find - and that will get your bowl to sparkle just as well and for pennies on the dollar compared to this stuff. Pay $40 to clean a toilet bowl? Maybe a millionaire would, but then again, if you are either millionaire, YOU wouldn't be cleaning your toilet bowl your maid would.
