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Getting Harmalas off your Skin??

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JohnIce2

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Quick question. Not entirely important but I am curious (and want to stop glowing under black-lights like I'm radioactive or something).

How do you get the Harmala Alkaloids florescence off or out of your skin?
and also how do you get it out of carpet? because I purged on accident and it seems to have stained my carpet neon blue under a black light (reddish brown under normal).
 
JohnIce2 said:
Quick question. Not entirely important but I am curious (and want to stop glowing under black-lights like I'm radioactive or something).

How do you get the Harmala Alkaloids florescence off or out of your skin?
and also how do you get it out of carpet? because I purged on accident and it seems to have stained my carpet neon blue under a black light (reddish brown under normal).

:lol: i would like to know the same thing. I mean when it is on your skin it comes off with soap & water after a while but you cannot really give your carpet or tables a shower.

What i like to do is paint symbols on my walls with harmala solution & then spring the blacklight on unsuspecting trippers :twisted:
 
Good luck with that. :D

Used kitchen towels for filtering...put them in the washing machine...together with other stuff. Everything what was in it glows under UV now.
 
I never worked with harmalas yet but in my free time i often experiment on some other chemicals.
I once dumped a bunch of acetone with lots of dissolved plastic in it over my leg by mistake.
The jeans was destroyed and my skin was covered in a plastic like film which was impossible to get rid of just like tree resin.
I went to a hardware store and bought some wasing paste which is used by people who paint stuff or work with glue/oils and it got rid of the plastic/acetone goo film thing really quickly without hurting my skin.
Maybe you could get some of this kind of washing paste? Its also good practice if you work with oils that you use that to really clean your skin. Maybe it helps make you look less radioactive too. :)
 
:lol:
On the skin it stays for a long time, I guess more or less until you shed everything than came in contact with it.
I spilled a bit on a kitchen counter -smooth surface- and I couldn't scrub it away with acetic acid, aceton or soap.
I think you carpet might just stay that way 😁
 
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