Stains happen, and if you suffer from nocturnal nosebleeds, sleep with your mouth open or you’ve got a tendency to romp romantically in bed with a bottle of wine, then they can happen to your sheets and pillowcases also. When life’s little indulgences become stain-makers on your harbor, relax — there is a way to save the day regardless of what went wrong. The trick lies in the pretreatment step, and the faster you work to knock out the stain, the easier it will be to remove it.

Pull the pillowcase in the bed and then head for the laundry room the moment you first observe the stain. Just like ex-lovers — stains left lingering are far more difficult to vanquish.

Expand your affected pillowcase out on a protected area, apply a treatment of liquid laundry detergent, dishwashing soap or degreaser right to the stain and then enable the entire debacle to rest for 3 to 5 minutes. According to the laundry professionals in Clorox, this technique works particularly well on oil-based stains such as lipstick. So, the next time you aim to your beloved’s lips and land on his pillowcase rather, it won’t soften the mood.

Fill a bucket with cold water when it is a bloodstain you’re trying to undertake. Presoak your pillowcase from the salty way for 3 to 4 hours, then use the liquid detergent trick listed in the prior step. Once the salt as well as the soap have had time to work, toss the pillowcase into a washer set to a cold wash.

Lift red wine stains from your pillowcase by dabbing the affected area with a clean cloth soaked in club soda or milk. When it does not get rid of the stain altogether, follow up by carefully dipping the stained cloth into boiling water and letting it remain there for many minutes, as long as the cloth maintenance label indicates hot water will not harm the pillowcase. Using this method, there is no reason why your spilled nightcap needs to become a nightmare.

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