How to Remove Stains From Clothes At Home Better Than The Dry Cleaner

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The occasional stain is inevitable whether it be from a plate of spaghetti and impromptu tire change on the side of the road or really any time spent with a toddler, you’re bound to encounter a tough stain at some point. Fortunately, however, stain removal doesn’t have to be a chore or involve the dry cleaner. Learn how to effectively remove stains: https://gentl.mn/how-to-remove-stains

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00:00 Introduction

Thanks to the Laundry Evangelist’s Laundry Camp for many of the tips shown in this video. If you ever have the chance to visit it at the Mall of America, you should do so.

No matter how careful a man may be in his day-to-day life with his clothes, the occasional stain is inevitable whether it be from a plate of spaghetti and impromptu tire change on the side of the road or really any time spent with a toddler, you’re bound to encounter a tough stain at some point. Fortunately, however, stain removal doesn’t have to be a chore or involve the dry cleaner. As long as you understand some basic chemistry you’ll be all set.

01:10 Four Basic Types Of Stains
Stains can be organic or inorganic in nature and from there can be oily or not. In other words, the four types of stains are organic, inorganic, oily organic, and oily inorganic. As examples of each of these, stains from living organisms including plants are considered organic, things like grass stains, blood, or red wine. Meanwhile, stains from manmade materials are inorganic, things like ink, solvents, or machine dust. Oily organics are things like barbecue sauce or sweat stains and oily inorganics are generally cosmetics like lipstick.

02:15 How To Get Rid Of Stains
First, standard organic stains are best treated with hot water and a substance that’s commonly marketed as bleach alternative. Bleach alternative and oxygen bleach are marketing names for a substance that’s scientifically known as sodium percarbonate or SPC for short. It’s the active ingredient in cleaners like Oxiclean but whereas those types of commercial cleaners usually contain fillers, SPC is most effective in its pure form.

For treatment of an organic stain, start by laying a towel down on your work surface. Actually, for any of the types of stains, we’re about to cover, putting down a clean towel is a good idea. Next, add a bit of SPC, we used about 1/2 capful to a basin of hot water and stir to completely dissolve it. Then, thoroughly wet the stained area of the garment in question with the hot water and SPC mixture. Lay the garment flat on the towel and gently blot at the stain with a clean cotton cloth, washcloth, or towel. You can also use a garment safe stain brush on most fabrics as we’re doing here. After pre-treating your stain this way, it can be washed as normal in your machine and if you’d like, you can also add a bit more SPC directly to the drum of the machine during the wash process.

Next, standard inorganic stains like ink are best removed by the use of a solvent. Rubbing alcohol or more technically isopropyl alcohol is best here. Although you can also use different substances like plain vodka. Applying the alcohol to the stain with a spray bottle works well after which point it can be gently blotted. Then wash as normal and as before, you can add some SPC to the machine if you’d like.

All oily stains whether they’re organic or inorganic in nature are best treated by first dealing with the oil. As oils often surround other staining substances, we’ll be looking at these stains sort of like a stain sandwich that is oil layer, stain layer, oil layer. To remove the first oil layer, fill a spray bottle with a solution of 50 percent white vinegar and 50 percent water. Spray the oil layer of the stain and then blot. Actually, using a stain brush may work best here. Next, apply a bit of water along with laundry detergent or better yet soap flakes and scrub again to deal with the main stain layer and for the final oil layer, spray again with your water and vinegar solution and blot or scrub a final time. To finish here, you guessed it! Wash as normal with optional SPC.

Date: April 8, 2019

33 thoughts on “How to Remove Stains From Clothes At Home Better Than The Dry Cleaner

  1. I have a light blue suit dress shirt with some unknown stain, possibly rust (it's brownish orange) from many years ago. Is rust organic? Do these techniques and solutions work when my shirt with stain is not white? @Gentleman's Gazzette

  2. I am having trouble with stains left by the car leather seat on my husband's white shirt…. he is a taxidriver ans all day seated the leather seat leaves black marks on his back shirt… pls help

  3. I saw someone saying they use hairspray & another saying they use aerosol sunscreen for ink stain removal.

    I always used hairspray to remove ink stains but he explains why it works by showing either isopropyl or grain alcohol as the solution. Hairspray has a high concentration of alcohol (top ingredient in most) so that would also explain why aerosol sunscreen works bc it also contains alcohol (which is interesting bc alcohol dries out skin).

    I can bet that mosquito spray would also work just as well as either of those but the cheapest by far is 92% isopropyl alcohol at Walmart. I think it’s less than $1 in the pharmacy area. (Note the %. I never did until I learned that really cheap $ store alcohol has like 35% concentration so it’s mostly water).

    The same is true with hydrogen peroxide. I saw a video stating that you can’t get stronger than 3% peroxide but I’m pretty sure there are varying %s on the shelf at Walmart. (No i don’t work for Walmart 😂)

    I just watched a video on the pros/cons of using spray on sunscreen. Cons: it dries out your skin, most of the spray doesn’t make it on your skin. The only pro I guess is convenience & they said you MUST rub the spray in or it won’t work at all.

    For white leather tennis shoes, using nail polish remover (acetone) & cotton balls makes them like new & super white. You can get 100% acetone for .99 at Walmart & they have less %s also though my thinking is why not get the strongest & dilute, if needed. Otherwise you’re buying water.

    On that note, if water is the first ingredient listed in any product you buy, it means that’s the most prolific ingredient a product contains be it shampoo, laundry detergent, syrup, etc. In case you didn’t know, ingredients are always listed in the order of the greatest concentration first & lastly, whatever is the least contained.

    Acetone is right below the nail polish on the bottom shelf. I’m pretty sure men can buy acetone for other uses probably in different departments or at the hardware store.

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