Rub some corn meal on the spot after blotting it.Brush it off after a few mts. and then apply prewash stain remover, rinse. Wash in hot water.
Another surprising tip for oil stains, is good old shampoo! Just rub the shampoo on the spot with a soft brush. Let sit for a few minutes and then wash in hot or warm water.
For an old butter or oil stain, regenerate the stain first with WD-40, then rub in some undiluted dish detergent. Wash as usual.How to wash away oil stain on the whilte cloth?
If you can you could try bleaching it for a couple of hours and then washing it... or try something called Krud Kutter... that took grease stains out of my white tee without letting it sit so that could work...
rember that goop that men gets their heands clean with after working on a car.
try that and it will work
i did it to for someone and with things i had and it really works
try that and see.
good luck
Try Gojo or any good waterless hand cleaner. Rub it into the stain well and then rinse with tepid water. May have to do this several times.
Dish soap helps, Dawn always got out those tough stains.
GET A DEAGREASER THEN ';BIZ';....LET SOAK IN COLD WATER. THOGH YOU FAILED TO METION WHAT KIND OF GREASE.MY ANSWER STANDS ~
Thank You
If you are talking about removing animal fat from a fabric, its a secret of the dry cleaning industry. But I will let you in on their little secret, sprinkle salt on the stain rub it well with your fingers, let sit for several minutes and clean the fabric per instructions. I think there is a time limit on how soon you should apply salt to a fat stain, you might be over the limit.
You need a strong degreaser like Dawn or Tide. Pour directly on stain and let it sit for a wahil an wash in hot water. Murphy's Oil Soap works very well also.
When my son worked at mcdonalds I always used Cascade (dissolved) to cut the greasy. It's made to elimate protein (grease is a protein)and it always completely cleaned all of his greasy clothing.
Pre-soak and add a quarter cup of white vinegar.
If that does not work, try Oxi-Clean. I think that's the name of it. You can get it at the supermarket. It's a powder, so pre-soak it in that.
You didn't say what kind of oil or what kind of fabric. That could make a difference. The last time I got motor oil on clothing, I had to have it drycleaned. Nothing I had in the house would budge those stains, but the cleaner got them all. For cooking oil, straight dish detergent or laundry detergent works some times. When that doesn't work, I get pretty good results with a stain remover such as Shout. If the fabric is cotton, you can just keep trying until something works. If it is silk and special, you may want to go straight to the drycleaner. Good luck.
use w d 40 spray on the stain and rub then put soap on and lather up and rub then wash it should get out the oil.. it does work sound crazy but you need to losen up the oil or grease with grease
bleach
try some pine sol or lysol. it do work
oxyclean should do the job
per Martha Stewart -
Stain Stick: An enzyme-based cleaner available at grocery and discount stores. Most effective on food, grease, oil, protein, and dirt-based stains and can be used on any fabric and color. It can remain on fabric for up to one week. I found the Carbona庐 products to be the best at removing specific stains, especially rust.
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