![]() ![]() Though it's easy to assume differently, period blood can be removed from clothing using the same steps and products as blood stains from a scraped knee, nicked finger or cut on your ankle.Pretreat the stain and launder the garment.(This may take several hours, depending on the severity of the stain.) Presoak for a longer period of time, or mix one quart water with one teaspoon laundry detergent and one tablespoon ammonia and let the garment soak in the solution. If that doesn't work, repeat the presoaking step.Then, launder in warm water with fabric-safe bleach. Pretreat with a laundry pre-treater, or rub the stain with bar soap.Allow the garment to soak in the mixture for several hours or overnight. Prepare a mixture of cold water and one to two teaspoons of liquid laundry detergent or a stain-removing product like Carbona Oxy Powered Laundry Soaker. Instead, all you need is a little patience and some heavy-duty stain remover. Just because you waited to remove a blood stain doesn't necessarily mean it's permanent. Refrain from putting the garment in the dryer until the stain is completely gone. If the stain remains, repeat the steps above.Machine wash the garment in warm water with a fabric-safe bleach. Apply a laundry pre-treater, or rub in an enzyme-containing liquid laundry detergent.Sc rub the stained garment by hand in cold water. Pour the hydrogen peroxide onto the sponge, not directly on the stain. Sponge the stain with hydrogen peroxide, or rub bar soap into the stain.If the stain is super fresh, place it under cold running water and try to flush out as much of the fresh blood as you can. Soak the stain in cold water as soon as possible. ![]()
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