Cream of Tartar and Bleach
#1
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Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: NE Missouri
Posts: 6,418
Cream of Tartar and Bleach
Yesterday, I went to the Mo. State Fair. There was a beautiful cross-stitched quilt that a person had resurrected and completed. In the story, she mentioned that she had used, if I remember correctly, a whole can of cream of tartar and bleach to take out the rust stains. Diluted in water and swished about. I am hoping that someone knows about this, more than I read, and proportions, thoughts about what kept the embroidery thread from losing its colors, etc. There was a lady who also stood beside me and read the story and she was puzzled, too. The quilt was so pretty and dainty and certainly looked spanking new and no blue marks were left where the cross-stitch was, which she said had come out in the solution as well. Can anyone enlighten me about the process? Thank you.
#5
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Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Western Wisconsin
Posts: 12,930
Bleach weakens fibers, so I can't imagine her using bleach on a project like this. A quick Google showed cream of tartar being used instead of bleach, or in combination with hydrogen peroxide (although I think hp is also hard on fabric).
#6
Junior Member
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 128
a quick Google search provided this:
Cream of Tartar is an alternative to household bleach. Use it mixed with half as much vinegar or water anywhere you would use bleach.
Fabric stains? Mix a few teaspoons of cream of tartar with some glycerin and use like spray-and-wash.
The stuff I learn from this board is just amazing. Thanks to Quilter 65 for bringing up this thread
Cream of Tartar is an alternative to household bleach. Use it mixed with half as much vinegar or water anywhere you would use bleach.
Fabric stains? Mix a few teaspoons of cream of tartar with some glycerin and use like spray-and-wash.
The stuff I learn from this board is just amazing. Thanks to Quilter 65 for bringing up this thread
#7
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Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: NE Missouri
Posts: 6,418
Maybe she said cream of tartar INSTEAD of bleach, but that isn't the way we two ladies read it. Had a husband waiting so had to move fast!! Am helping a friend with her mother's cross-stitched blocks and there is that blue marking so wanted to find a way that would help, and not lose the color. Never googled first, which is what I usually do. Too much fair.
#10
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Cedar Hill, TX
Posts: 430
I had an quilt emboridered with thread from "50's. The fabric around it had faded so bad I got mad and washed in a cup of bleach to see what happened. The border that was once blue came out pink but the thread did not change one bit. I think older thread just holds color better. Hanging the quilt in a room with open flame gas stove is what caused the fading to start with.
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11-29-2011 05:23 AM