How do you remove bleach stains? I would say you should just stop using bleach altogether; that's what environmental scientists are telling us these days. The manufacturing of bleach as well as its domestic and industrial use has been linked to enough health problems, particularly cancer, to warrant the erradication of chlorine bleach altogether.
You ask me, "how do I get rid of bleach stains?" I say you stop using bleach and instead make do with the very good alternatives I've listed under the heading "natural bleach alternatives." If, however, you aren't willing to make the switch right now, I understand. I still use bleach myself, albeit very infrequently. But let's get to the crux of the matter, removing or repairing stains leftover by chlorine bleach.
Bleach Stain Removal / Repair
For an immediate treatment of a bleach stain, you may want to consider Sodium Thiosulfate. Sodium Thiosulfate, also referred to as photographic fixer, is an agent that has been used as a way to neutralize the bleaching effects of other substances. In other words, it neutalizes bleaching agents, and helps restore fabrics or surfaces that have been bleached. Sodium thiosulfate can be used as an immediate spot treatment to neutralize bleach before it stains your fabric. However, you would usually blot the stain with a clean white cloth that has been dipped in S.T. until the stain either begins to disappear or the fabric becomes saturated. Rinse with cold water and repeat until the desired effect is achieved or no more progress is made. Apparently they sell adequate quantities of this at pet stores to help neutralize chlorine in tap water.
If you're trying to remove or repair a bleach stain without the use of labratory grade chemicals, the first thing I would try is White Vinegar. Before you do this, make sure that you've rinsed the bleach out of the fabric. Combining vinegar and bleach (or bleach and almost any acid) results in the release of a toxin, chlorine gas. Go get yourself some heinz white vinegar or even the generic stuff; it doesn't matter which. Soak a clean white cloth with the vinegar and start dabbing/blotting the stain. Keep doing this until the fabric won't hold anymore vinegar in the immediate vicinity of the bleach stain. Rinse with cold water and repeat. Vinegar has been used traditionally as a color restoration solution for a very long time. Acids in vinegar (acetic acid) will help to dissolve or peel away any damaged fabric that may be causing a bleach stain to stand out. Vinegar will eventually damage cotton fabrics with enough exposure, so use white vinegar conservatively when treating bleach stains.
If vinegar or sodium thiosulfate aren't getting rid of your bleach stain you should consider Marvy Fabric Markers to cover up the discoloration. The alternative to the Marvy Fabric Marker is the Sharpie permanent marker; really, both options are just as effective at covering up the bleach stain. You can find Marvy Fabric Markers in almost any craft store or fabric store, and they're made in a variety of colors. If you're lucky you may just find the color that works for whatever it is you've bleached. Fabric Markers are usually safe to wash, but I wouldn't use a bleaching agent on that fabric again--if you get my meaning. Test the marker on a clean white rag before applying it to your fabric, to make sure it's the right shade for your needs. Oh, Crayola makes fabric markers too!
This might sound a little kooky, but try drying your clothes in direct sunlight to lighten the color surrounding the bleach stain. I know this doesn't sound very practical, but at this point, we're running out of options. Sunlight has a very powerful bleaching effect--ask any piece of driftwood what I'm talking about and I'm sure they'll tell you the same. According to Ellen Sandbeck, author of Organic Housekeeping, laying a bleach stained piece of fabric over a bush or a grass lawn in direct sunlight will increase the bleaching effects of the sun because of the oxygen (another powerful bleaching agent) produced by the vegetation beneath. Make certain you shake those clothes out before bringing them inside.
The last resort in your battle to remove bleach stains is what we call a color stripper. Color stripper, otherwise known as color remover, is what we use to take color out of a garment or fabric before redying it a new color. I guess if you can't get that bleach stain out, and you can't possibly stand to wear your clothes as they are in public, then you may want to consider stripping the color and starting fresh. Sodium Hydrosulfite, the most common color remover on the market, is cool stuff too because it's an environmentally sound way to bleach fabrics. Some people swear it's even more effective than bleach when it comes to whitening fabrics, but I wouldn't use it all the time.
Preventing Bleach Stains
Like I mentioned in the introduction, if you want to prevent bleach stains you should stop using bleach; it's simply too powerful and too damaging to risk its use in your home or in the commercial sector. So I've provided a list of alternatives to your right. But, aside from alternatives, there are a few things you can do to prevent bleach stains from showing up when you least expect them to.
- If you have a bleach dispenser built in to your washing machine, make sure to rinse that out before you put any colors in the wash. Sometimes a little extra bleach gets left behind, and it ends up on the colors you were planning to wash after your whites.
- If you know you're not washing any colors that will bleed, or if you're just not worried about, start washing your colors first. That way you won't have to deal with the hypothetical situation I described above.
- If you're skeptical about either of those two options, you can always run a rinse cycle real quick before putting in your next load of laundry. Make sure you rinse the bleach dispenser, too.