Red Clay Staining
Winston-Salem runs on red clay. It stains every granite base it touches. Rain kicks the mud up, and the sun bakes it into a hard orange glaze.
This is iron oxide rust. Regular soap is useless against it. Pressure washing is the wrong move because it forces the red pigment deeper into the porous stone. Families searching for headstone cleaning services near me often assume the stone is ruined. It isn't. We use a chemical neutralizer that targets the iron. It breaks the bond holding the rust in the rock. We wash the surface, and the orange stain washes away.
Moravian Marble (The "Flat Stones")
In God's Acre, the white marble stones lay flat on the ground. They catch every bit of rain and dirt.
This marble is soft. It suffers from "sugaring," where the surface turns to sand. A pressure washer will destroy the lettering immediately. We provide specialized grave stone cleaning services for these delicate markers. We use a biological wash that kills the mold but leaves the stone alone. We clean them gently without sanding down the surface.
Tobacco Legacy Soot
Old tobacco factories pumped out coal smoke for years. That soot coated the cemeteries in a hard, black crust.
This soot bonds to the rock. It resists standard cleaning. Scrubbing it mechanically ruins the polish. We use a chemical carbon-breaker. It dissolves the hardened soot layer safely. We rinse it away to show the original stone color that has been hidden for fifty years.
Magnolia Leaf Staining
Magnolia trees drop heavy, thick leaves that act like a wet blanket. They sit on the flat markers and rot.
The rotting leaves keep the stone wet, breeding black mildew. The brown dye goes right into the pores, so you can't scrub it out. We use a poultice paste. It sucks the brown stain out of the rock like a sponge. We peel the dried paste off, and the stone is clean again.
Ice Splitting
We get ice storms here. Water seeps into hairline cracks in the monuments. When it freezes, the ice expands and snaps the stone apart.
We see corners popped off bases and tablets split down the middle. We repair this with monument-grade epoxy. We inject the adhesive and clamp the stone tight. It cures to be stronger than the granite. This seals the crack so water can't get back in.
Lichen on Rough Granite
Lichen thrives on the older, rough-cut monuments. It digs roots into the stone surface and eats the minerals.
Scraping lichen off a dry stone pulls up chips of the rock. We saturate the growth with a surfactant. This forces the lichen to let go. We brush it away gently. The stone gets clean without losing any surface material.
Sinking in Clay Soil
This clay ground never sits still. Heavy rain turns it to mush, and summer heat turns it to concrete. That motion throws monuments off balance.
Markers lean or sink deep into the turf. We lift the monument out. We dig out the unstable dirt. We install a base of compacted gravel. Gravel doesn't hold water, so it packs tight and keeps the stone straight.
Restoration Costs
Cleaning a fragile Moravian marble stone costs differently than restoring a granite upright. We price based on the job:
- Red Clay Removal: Chemical extraction of iron oxide stains.
- Moravian Marble Cleaning: Gentle biological cleaning for soft stones.
- Carbon Removal: Cleaning industrial soot.
- Marker Leveling: Resetting sunken stones on gravel.
We visit the grave. We check the condition. Then we give you a price.


