If a hot wash doesn't get rid of the stain, try rubbing it with washing powder and rinsing. If it's still a problem you could dab with dry-cleaning fluid, taking great care. Ironing on a low heat between two layers of absorbent paper can help also. Sprinkling talcum powder thickly over the stain and leaving it to absorb for a while is another idea.
After washing the pants twice in cold water with no results, my housekeeper sprayed the liquid butter stains (which covered the entire leg of the pants) with hairspray, washed them in warm water and all the stains were gone!
Washing soda can be effective - disolve that in tepid or hot water - consider garment cloth for appropriate temperature, then soak butter affected item, this works on most grease stains for me organic (like food) & inorganic - engine grease
Wash it in the washer
If it is on skin, then baby oil or peanut butter should do the trick. If on clothing, then club soda, or dish soap.
You can remove tea stain from clothing a few different ways. You can try putting some oxy clean on the stain.
achoihol
u buy a stain remover pen
Remove as much of the chapstick from the clothing as you can with a dry paper towel. Be careful not to spread the chap-stick stain around.Rub the front and back of the stain with liquid detergent.Wash the garment as you normally would in hot water.
Start by rinsing the stain in warm water. Then rub the stain with liquid detergent. Then wash the clothing however you normally would.
Butter will stain clothing because it is oily and it is a protein. Rub it with detergent and soak it in cold water. If the stain looks like it is gone, wash it as you normally would. If not rub it with more detergent and wash it on a cool water cycle.
Any protein based stain will be disolved by papain enzymes. Answer this question...
Remove as much of the stain as you can by scraping.Spray with a pretreatment. See if you can find a dry-cleaning strength solvent, and use that.Rub the stain with liquid detergent and wash it as you normally would.
It can because soda can stain clothing.
Once any material (wine, food, grease etc) has touched any fabric (carpet, upholstery, clothing etc) a stain begins to form. The trick of stain removal is to get to the stain as fast as possible, before it has time to set. For example, when wine falls onto your carpet much of the initial spill is picked up right away. If the homeowner chooses not to hire a professional cleaner, but instead leaves the stain alone, the wine will bond with the fabric. The stronger the bond, the harder the stain becomes to remove. Some things can prevent the stain from setting, like cleaning products. If you have a wine stain on an item of clothing, and you put the item of clothing into the dryer before the stain is removed, then the heat from the dryer will strengthen the chemical bond of the stain and make the stain harder to remove. One very important thing in stain prevention is to always blot, and never rub an area with a stain. Rubbing the stain, even if you're trying to remove it, will rub the stain into the fabric, and make it harder to remove. Time, heat, rubbing and improper stain removal will always make stains harder to remove.
To remove antifreeze from clothing spray the stain with a pre-wash product. Let it set on the stain for several minutes. Pour water over the stain to try to push the stain out. Blot at the stain with a cloth. Do not rub the stain in. Wash the clothing in the washing machine with color safe bleach and laundry detergent.