View Single Post
Old 08-20-2012, 11:07 AM
  #12  
ghostrider
Super Member
 
ghostrider's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 4,688
Default

Originally Posted by Peepers View Post
I've always used vinegar and it's worked every time. I even made a red and white quilt with JoAnn's Country Classic solids and I've machine washed it since I've finished it and there is not one single spot of red on the white. I just fill put the fabric in the washing machine, dump in half a gallon on white vinegar, fill the machine with cold water just to cover the fabric and let it sit for at least an hour. I then empty out the water, and wash with laundry soap on hot. I throw in a piece of white fabric just to be sure and I've never had a color transfer to the white. I'll probably get flak for this, but, just saying, it has worked for me for years.
And did you test all those fabrics first to see if they actually were bleeders to begin with? Why go through that whole process if the fabric is not going to bleed anyway? Vinegar will definitely result in no bleeding if the fabric wasn't going to bleed in the first place.

It is a chemical impossibility for vinegar (or salt) to prevent todays dyes from bleeding. You have simply been lucky, not used any bleeders, and gone to a lot of extra trouble.


ETA: And what is this Quilting Article that is spreading VERY outdated information to our novice quilters?

Last edited by ghostrider; 08-20-2012 at 11:11 AM.
ghostrider is offline