How to Remove Stains From Clothes and Carpet Naturally
Use common kitchen ingredients to fight all manner of stains.
There are many household ingredients that you can use to remove stains from clothes and carpet. This way you can avoid using conventional laundry stain removers that are full of artificial fragrance and other unpronounceable, questionable ingredients. Keep it natural with what’s already in your kitchen cupboards.
1. Baking Soda
Make a paste of baking soda and water and scrub into carpet stains. Once the powder dries, vacuum it up.
2. Toothpaste
Rub it briskly into stains on clothing or carpet. Wash or rinse as usual. Toothpaste is supposed to be good for reducing stains in tea and coffee cups. (The TreeHugger article where I first read this tip specifically recommends Tom’s of Maine toothpaste. It also warns against using whitening toothpastes, which can bleach clothes.)
3. Lemon Juice
Scrub underarm stains with equal parts lemon juice and water. Use straight lemon juice or a paste of lemon juice with cream of tartar for ink stains, preferably as soon as they happen, then wash in cold water. Use a paste of lemon juice and salt for mildew or rust stains, then dry in sunlight. Fresh lemon juice can freshen a load of whites and reduce mineral stains.
4. Coconut Oil
Rub some coconut oil into a spot on carpet or upholstery, and it will loosen the stain. You can also mix with baking soda to be more effective. This baking soda-coconut oil combo can also double as a whitening toothpaste to remove tooth stains.
5. Salt
Get rid of perspiration stains on shirts by making a saltwater soak. Pour 1⁄4 to 1⁄2 cup salt into washing machine and add enough cold water to cover clothes. Mix, then let soak for 1-2 hours. Wash as usual. If you don’t have a washing machine, make a salt paste with water and apply to stains before washing by hand.
If you have blood stains on clothes, soak in a mixture of 1 quart cold water and 2 tbsp salt before washing.
Shake a generous amount of salt onto red wine stains, as soon as they’ve happened. Let sit for a few hours before washing in cold water.
6. Vinegar
This can also get rid of perspiration stains. Soak clothes in a mixture of 1⁄4 cup vinegar and cold water, then wash as usual.
7. Water
Pour a kettle full of boiling water over stains from as great a height as you can manage – at least 2 feet high. (Try standing on a chair.) This works on berry stains, ketchup, red wine, coffee, and oily spots. One TreeHugger reader recommended putting a bowl inside a shirt, with the stain centered in the middle, then pour boiling water through the stain into the bowl.
Use ice water to get rid of blood stains. Soak item in a bowl of cold water, adding ice as needed, to loosen the stain before laundering.
8. White Chalk
If you have an oil stain on fabric, rub in some white chalk as soon as possible. Wash in cold water, and avoid putting in the dryer unless the stain is completely gone, since that will set it.
9. Rubbing Alcohol
This is effective for oil stains, too. Dab a small amount onto the stained fabric before washing in cold water.
10. White Wine
Here’s the one case in which two wrongs make a right. If you spill red wine, pour a small amount of white wine onto the stain to counteract it. Blot with a clean absorbent towel from the outside in to prevent spreading. Treat stain remnants with another method.