rm_dash_r_star,
@rm_dash_r_star@lemm.ee avatar

I use it to lubricate machine parts at times. Also good coating for rust protection like the sockets of outdoor bulbs or tools in storage. There’s better products for skin protection. Years ago it was commonly used for infant diaper rash, but again there’s better products for that now. I don’t think I’ve ever used it on my body, it’s made from petroleum so it’s really just highly refined axle grease.

rackmountrambo,

Yeah it's actually a decent dialectic grease.

Edit: In fact after a quick research, I can't really find the difference between a 14$ tiny tube of dialectic and a cheapo massive vat of Vaseline. Guess I should get some for the shop.

rm_dash_r_star,
@rm_dash_r_star@lemm.ee avatar

It works great for that. It’s also good in automotive for bulb sockets, I’ve used it for that as well. It’s amazing actually, slop some in a socket and next time you pull a bulb it will still look brand new, even if not well protected as the case with antique cars. You would think it might interfere with electrical contact an Vaseline is completely non-conductive, it doesn’t seem to at all. You can also use it on car battery terminals and it will completely stop any corrosion, however I actually use 90W gear oil on those since it attracts less dirt and works as well.

Eufalconimorph,

It’s dielectric (non-conductive) not dialectic (talking).

Sharkapotamus,

I play sports and always put it on my heels before switching into cleats. Prevents blisters. Works with new shoes too, while you break them in.

wildeaboutoskar,
@wildeaboutoskar@beehaw.org avatar

Good tip, will try that

pewgar_seemsimandroid,

bricks

wildeaboutoskar,
@wildeaboutoskar@beehaw.org avatar

Eh?

sparr,

The ointment for my overnight dry eyes is half petroleum jelly half mineral oil. I can and have used Vaseline (which is almost entirely petroleum jelly) in a pinch.

xedrak,
@xedrak@kbin.social avatar

When my siblings and I were young we would occasionally get eczema flair ups on our hands. Whenever this happened my mom would fill a sock with Vaseline and have us wear it on our hands to bed. Kinda funny.

99nights,

Did it work though?

Eczema runs hard in my family and my kids get it terribly. We’ve tried a lot of things but never thought of Vaseline.

xedrak,
@xedrak@kbin.social avatar

We had pretty mild cases, but yeah I remember it working quite well! I wouldn’t recommend it without speaking to a professional first since your kids’ cases are quite severe, but I’ve had good experiences with it.

99nights,

Yeah we’ve seen skin specialists and tried everything up until steroids.

In the summer it’s worst. I feel so sorry for my kids but we’re hoping that they grow out of it like we did. I’m 34 now and I only really get it on my hands and fingers, I can’t wear any rings because of it. I still get it mildy on my legs too and sometimes it gets bad to a point where I’m bleeding everywhere from scratching it but my hands are the worst, my skin is like old leather now and looks like it’s damaged from acid burns.

luthis,

YES. Tiny cuts.

You know when you get a paper cut or similar, (not a scratch, a clean cut) and it stings and is really irritating, but it’s not deep enough to bleed much if at all?

Whack some vaseline on it. You block the air from your nerves and get instant relief.

Also use it sometimes to prevent chafing, like before a long bike ride.

basketsandhoes,

I’m pretty sure that most of what Neosporin is is Vaseline… And it makes sense. It’s basically Vaseline with a mild antibiotic.

Vaseline is awesome for preventing scars too: when the wound is still open, use Neosporin, but after it closes up a bit and is just healing, switch to Vaseline and just keep it in Vaseline until it’s totally gone.

phar,

No need for the Neosporin at all, just use the vaseline

200ok,

This.

Wounds heal best when they’re kept moist and have a barrier.

OwenEverbinde,
@OwenEverbinde@reddthat.com avatar

Carmex lip balm as well.

KevonLooney,

That’s exactly what it was originally meant for.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petroleum_jelly

Native Americans discovered the use of petroleum jelly for protecting and healing skin.[4] Sophisticated oil pits had been built as early as 1415–1450 in Western Pennsylvania.[5] In 1859, workers operating the United States’s first oil rigs noticed a paraffin-like material forming on rigs in the course of investigating malfunctions. Believing the substance hastened healing, the workers used the jelly on cuts and burns.

luthis,

Oh wow, I never knew!

guleblanc,

Lubricating the cork in a saxophone neck or a clarinet tenon. It turned out to be not a good idea at all, since the Vaseline speaks into the cork and dissolves the glue holding the cork to the instrument. But until then it does a great job.

tiredofsametab,

speaks into the cork

Soon, Cork could no longer ignore those dark whispers, those awful voices. Cork knew what needed to be done, and that only they could do it.

VerdantSporeSeasoning,

Cork let go. Cork was… Free.

And then came an explosion of sound.

Jackcooper,

I know what your great great grandma used it for

calhoon2005,
@calhoon2005@aussie.zone avatar

I use it to search for things that you can’t see.

bruzie,
@bruzie@lemmy.nz avatar

I keep getting stuck here all the time.

DickFiasco,

Sometimes it blows my mind.

chardiemacdennis,

Isn’t you, isn’t me

trouser_mouse,
@trouser_mouse@lemmy.world avatar

Like ghosts?

Pazintach, (edited )
@Pazintach@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

I use medical petroleum jelly on my carbon steel stuffs to prevent them from rust. I think it works better than WD40, and I don’t have to protect my hands while applying it.

And sometimes I mix it with bee wax as wood oil. I think it works.

MelancholikhPatata, (edited )
@MelancholikhPatata@kbin.social avatar

I like putting vaseline on my lips overnight (it's best to apply it on damp lips)

200ok,

The damp part is key. It can lock in moisture, but can’t add any on its own.

jo3shmoo,

I use it when casting my patients who have a partial hand amputation. It works great as a separator for casting agents and allows me to easily easily slip a cast off of them. It also helps prevent ripping out too too many hairs during the process.

LazaroFilm,
@LazaroFilm@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve seen it used on Cinema Camera filters to make funky reflections in the lens.

We were filming a dream sequence and to make the edges of the image soft and blurry, we used an optical flat (a clear filters basically a piece of clear glass that slides in front of the camera’s lens) and the DP (director of Photography, aka the Cinematographer) smeared some Vaseline over the edges of the flat, painting the blurry edges with his finger. It worked really nicely, unfortunately I can’t find the final video online to show the result.

Euraru,

Saving this for future filming thank you!

Hhffggshn,

Back in the olden days of television, a very thin film of Vaseline on the lens softened the wrinkles of anyone on air.

Euraru,

How old are we talking about? 1990’s or 1950’s?

Hhffggshn,

The olden days of the 1950s and even 1960s.

elavat0r,
@elavat0r@mander.xyz avatar

I’ve seen hairspray used on a clear filter to create a similar bloom effect!

Anaphylactic_Gock,
@Anaphylactic_Gock@lemmy.world avatar

Technically still for my lips but it’s super

Skyrmir,

I use it on the threads of plastic filter housings in my engine room. It’s keeps the salt water from seizing them.

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