Blood Stains Use a baking soda paste rubbed onto a dampened blood stain. Allow it to sit for up to an hour. It can help lift the stain from the fabric. Because baking soda also can whiten, it will help to remove the color or dye portion of the stain as well. If clothes contain color, use color-safe bleach. Agitate 5 more minutes, then turn machine off and let soak 15 more minutes. If the clothes are not entirely white, use color-safe bleach instead. Use 1 cup of white vinegar instead of bleach if you prefer.
It is a sodium perborate based product. While sodium perborate is excellent for cleaning and stain removal in hot water its very limited solubility in lukewarm and cold water does limit the scope of its use. One small bright red dish rag can ruin all your whites and light-colored garments because of color bleeding, leaving bright stains behind. Luckily, you can remove these stains by pretreating with liquid detergent and then using bleach on white clothing and hydrogen peroxide or white vinegar on colored clothing.
You can easily remove it by using vinegar. Add one cup of vinegar in a tub full of water and let the dyed clothes soak in it for 30 minutes. Then rinse them with cold water. So, if you have got dye transferred from one clothing to another, then do not panic and try to handle it in an easier way. Skip to content Common questions. The more times you wash your white nylon fabric with a mild detergent, the more chance there is for it to become discolored and even yellow, and no one likes their white clothes to be yellow.
Bleach is a very harsh agent, and no matter what you are bleaching, you want to make sure you are using it correctly. If you bleach your nylon, you should be able to get rid of any stains or discoloration you might have gotten on your fabric. First, you want to put in your items and fill your washing machine with the desired amount of water.
If you are only washing one item, you will need less water than if you are washing many. Bleach should always be diluted when you use it to prevent your items from being ruined and to prevent any areas where the bleach was more concentrated than others. If you pour it in before the water, you could ruin your clothes when the chemicals rested on them. After your machine has the proper water and bleach mixture, you will just run a regular wash cycle with your machine.
If you remove your clothes from the wash cycle and the stain is not completely gone, or you did not get your intended results, you can repeat this process Steps until you do. After you have repeated the above steps as much as you needed to get your intended results, you can dry your fabric how you would regularly. Depending on how delicate an item you are working with, you could either use a dryer or line dry your items.
This is not the only option to whiten your fabric, so you have other choices if you are nervous about using harsh bleach on your clothing. This will not be as effective against stains but should work well to remove yellowing that was created over time. Even though it can take time, this process is a great and natural way to get rid of yellowing without the use of harsh chemicals.
Color Remover does still contain bleach, but it is a non-chlorine bleach that is less damaging to your clothing. Similar to whitening your nylon objects, you can use most of the same methods to remove the color from your nylon. If you are bleaching out a yellow discoloration, you should get a white or slightly off-white color after bleaching. If you are trying to bleach an item that is yellow due to a yellow dye, this result is not as guaranteed.
Often, even if bleach is used, you will not get a pure white color when you are trying to pull dye from the fabric. Skip to content Nylon fabric is a synthetic polymer fabric that is exceptionally strong and elastic. It is tough, abrasion-resistant, and easy to wash or to dye. The problem with the reductive discharge chemicals is that they all require heat to work well.
This is a big problem for your project! If you use higher temperatures, you are likely to find that the shape of your garment is distorted. See " How to Dye Spandex ". You should experiment with removing the color from your garment only if you will not mind very much if the garment is destroyed by your efforts. If you use a color remover without heat, most of the color will probably remain, though there's a chance that you will be very lucky and find that the dye in your garment is unusually easy to discharge.
If you use the recommended amount of heat for the discharge chemical, your garment is likely to be damaged.
Be very careful not to twist or stretch your spandex-containing garment while you are manipulating it. The easiest to find of the discharge chemicals is Rit Color Remover; there are similar products under other brand names, such as Tintex Color Remover.
Like all reductive discharge chemicals, Rit Color Remover requires heat to work. The easiest way to use it is in hot tap water in a washing machine, while the most effective method is to cook the garment in the color remover in a pot on the stovetop, bringing the temperature up to a simmer. Obviously, the stovetop method is right out, for a spandex blend.
You might try the color remover in warm water in a plastic dishpan or bucket, being very careful not to twist or stretch the garment as you stir it. If you do not stir frequently, the color removal will be uneven, producing a somewhat tie-dyed effect, but if you stir vigorously, the garment is more likely to be damaged. An alternative chemical that is not difficult to find is Jacquard Color Remover. It contains an entirely different chemical than Rit Color Remover, and thus it may perform differently at the low temperatures you will be forced to use.
If you do manage to remove most of the color from your garment with a sulfur-based discharge agent, you will then need to dye it in order to cover up the beige color that is a likely result.
Nylon can be dyed with a type of dye called acid dyes. Unfortunately, acid dyes require heat to attach well, so you once more run into the problem of being unable to follow the most effective recipe because of the heat-sensitivity of your spandex.
0コメント