Hard days at work and sweaty commutes home ruining your white shirts? Run over to your medicine cabinet and use your everyday painkillers for fast stain removal. Keep in mind that this will not work for every sweat stain, as these can be caused by a wide variety of deodorant formulas.
Steps
- Crush three or four aspirin pills. Break them down with a mortar and pestle. Alternatively, seal the pills inside a plastic bag and press it to powder with a rolling pin, a utensil handle, or a drinking glass.
- Strong-dose aspirin works best.
- You can fold the aspirin in a piece of paper instead of using a bag.
- Mix with water. Pour the crushed pill into a small bowl of warm water. Wait for the crushed particles to dissolve. If the powder doesn't dissolve, just add more warm water.
- Soak the stain. Place the stain in the bowl of warm water and aspirin. Wait at least five minutes, or up to two hours for significant stains.
- Alternatively, transfer the water to a spray bottle. Shake the bottle for 30 seconds, then spray the sweat stain until it is fully saturated.
- Rub on an aspirin paste. For best results, crush an additional two or three aspirin. This time, add just enough water to make a thick paste. Rub this over the stain and let sit another five minutes.
- The paste should be wet enough that no dry powder is visible, but not so wet that it becomes runny.
- Wash the garment as you would normally. Wash in cold or warm water, as the acid in the aspirin may be less effective in hot water. Check to see if the stain has been removed. If it has, fold and put away. If not, consider repeating and then washing again.
- If you live in an area with "hard," mineral-heavy water, this may inhibit the effects of your detergent. Consider adding washing soda to your laundry to counteract this.
Tips
- The main ingredient for aspirin, salicylic acid, works in the same way that vinegar, lemon juice, and boric acid do.[1]
- Soak until the sweat stains are gone to get satisfactory results.
Warnings
- This does not work for all types of sweat stains, due to differences between underarm deodorant products. If this doesn't work, you may need to switch deodorants (avoiding products that contain aluminum in particular).
Things You'll Need
- Aspirin pills
- Water
- Washing machine
Related wikiHows
- Get-Sweat-Stains-out-of-Clothing
- How to Clean Ink Stains out of Carpet
- How to Remove Blood Stains
- How to Avoid Night Time Stains During your Period
- How to Remove Mold Stains from Wood Floors
Sources and Citations
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from How to of the Day http://ift.tt/YT6B21
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