Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. Do you intend to drink water out of the tub? If not, why is this a problem?
omg, the children would be in the bathwater, and the lead would leech into the water from the glaze, and into their bodies through their skin.![]()
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I have never been one to get offensive on this site but had to just restrain myself from commenting on your intelligence.
Now you're going to make me do some research. I'm fairly certain it doesn't work that way (absorption via water on skin) but the risk with children in the tub is that they do ingest bath water or stick their wet hands in the mouth, thereby ingesting water that has leached lead from the tub.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. Do you intend to drink water out of the tub? If not, why is this a problem?
omg, the children would be in the bathwater, and the lead would leech into the water from the glaze, and into their bodies through their skin.![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
I have never been one to get offensive on this site but had to just restrain myself from commenting on your intelligence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. Do you intend to drink water out of the tub? If not, why is this a problem?
Presumably because it's in the glaze, which is prone to chipping, and she has small children.
Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. Do you intend to drink water out of the tub? If not, why is this a problem?
Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. Do you intend to drink water out of the tub? If not, why is this a problem?
Anonymous wrote:PP is correct. The inexpensive way to remedy this is to have it covered with a liner. Go with a custom one and do new tile work on the wall. It will look great!