Water in your home is an invitation for mold to move in and grow. Water can enter your home from dozens of locations. It can seep through basement floors or along cracks in the foundation. It can leak through roofs and around doors and windows. Broken or leaking plumbing in bathrooms and kitchens is a
What Makes A Mold Product Green?
Mold Off® is an eco-friendly, green mold product that removes mold completely and is safe for the environment. But what makes a product green? That’s a tough subject, particularly since we often end up trying to weigh questions like the resource extraction costs versus the environmental impact costs. And there are dozens of different ways
Spring into Golf and Remove Mold From Artificial Turf
Spring brings great golfing weather, but it also brings plenty of mold on artificial turf Spring rains and warmer temperatures encourage mold growth and artificial turf provides an ideal food source for mold spores, especially the organic materials that collect in the hollows and on the stems of the turf. Mold Off® is an innovative
Mold Off® Commercial Strength: For Big Mold Problems
Mold in schools, churches, correctional facilities, locker rooms, large commercial businesses with high traffic areas — all these locations and more are prone to mold and mildew problems. Lots of people means lots of moisture being tracked in, along with plenty of mold spores. Warm indoor environments are the perfect breeding grounds for mold and
Spring Showers Make Mold Flowers
Milder temperatures and spring showers are two elements needed to cause mold to grow, especially on outdoor surfaces. And sadly, every building has leaks somewhere, you just have learn where the weak points are — but look first at the foundation and roof. In humid climates, it is almost impossible to prevent mold growth, but
Top 10 Things to Know About Mold
Molds produce tiny spores to reproduce. The spores waft through the indoor and outdoor air continually. When mold spores land on a damp spot indoors, they may begin to grow and digest whatever they are growing on in order to survive. There are molds that can grow on wood, paper, carpet, and foods. When excessive