Get Rid of Bleach Stains
“Wow,” you’re saying to yourself, “another article already?!” Yes. We’re going on vacation (to Bemidji and then the North Shore) for a little bit, so I thought I’d leave you all with something to keep you busy: bleach stain removal. I know it’s not the most exciting topic, and when you first read the title you might even think it’s an oxymoronic statement–because you can’t really get rid of bleach stains. Well, that’s not entirely true, you see. You can get rid of bleach stains, but it takes a little more lateral thinking than your average stain requires. Think color restoration. Think color remover. Think blending. Then read the article and tell me what you think.

October 4th, 2007 at 1:06 pm
You can’t remove a bleech stain as you are correct; bleach causes the color to be romoved. It isn’t a “stain” ; it is sort of an anti-stain stain. Any application that you can use bleech on, you can use hydrogen peroxide. It will do the same brightening and cleanup. It is so benign that you can use it as a mouth wash in a 50/50 mixture with water. It kills the germs that cause plaque. It does everything that bleech does.