Need Help Cleaning Salvaged Quilts
#21
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: FL
Posts: 9
Well, thanks. But I'm not that nice. After being forced to retrieve them and breathe all that filth, I am not planning to return them. This house was supposed to be cleared out about ten days ago, but the person responsible deliberately left piles of nasty, neglected items for me to deal with.
#22
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2009
Posts: 2,061
You could wash them in the machine with minimal agitation. Rather than drying them in the dryer, I would put them on a sheet on the lawn if it is warm enough. The sunshine will help to deodorize and bleach stains. If that is not possible you could lay them on a basement floor on a sheet or on a hard floor surface to dry. Good idea to use Oxyclean or Retroclean in the wash and colorcatchers too. Good luck!
#23
I'd soak them for a couple days in a huge tub even a plastic trash can with a heavy dose of Oxyclean. Put something heavy on top of them to squish them up and down. Rinse, look at them then maybe put them back in another oxyclean soak. After you are happy with them, lay them out somehow, maybe on a wooden porch wiht a sheet under them to let them dry. Don't get in too big a hurry, do one and don't rush. When that one is put out to dry, start the next one. DO NOT HANG THEM TO DRY, puts too much stress on posssibly weak fabric &/or seams
#24
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: The Deep South near Cajun Country, USA
Posts: 5,435
To clarify again, these were not in a meth lab. They were in the home of an addict. They smell because the house was full of black mold and mildew. There are only a few mildewy places on the quilts. The rat pee is a bigger concern. Fortunately, it appears to be concentrated in the quilt that also has cigarette burns going all the way through it.
Things are going much better than expected. Most of these things will be usable. The color catchers are working. I'm washing them in a warm cycle with a prewash and an extra rinse, and I'm drying them on low heat. If I can get them to the point where they don't smell, then I can make sure they're dry, and I can store them indoors without filling the house with mold funk. After that I'll have time to worry about further cleaning.
When they came home, they smelled so awful I had to open the SUV windows. Not a particularly powerful smell, but very oppressive. Like being trapped in a filthy drawer.
Things are going much better than expected. Most of these things will be usable. The color catchers are working. I'm washing them in a warm cycle with a prewash and an extra rinse, and I'm drying them on low heat. If I can get them to the point where they don't smell, then I can make sure they're dry, and I can store them indoors without filling the house with mold funk. After that I'll have time to worry about further cleaning.
When they came home, they smelled so awful I had to open the SUV windows. Not a particularly powerful smell, but very oppressive. Like being trapped in a filthy drawer.
That being said, I haven't tried it for the mold & mildew. I always use a little bleach on that type stuff. There are probably better products out there.
#25
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Northern, Utah
Posts: 973
Depending on the drugs used you may have to discard them and see if they have contaminated anything in your house. As you know some things in a drug house, if they have made it must be destroyed to not cause permanent damage to others around them. I would make sure before using them and if you check with authorities they can tell you who to contact to see about that and how to clean them. It is best to be safe than sorry.
#27
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Jacksonville, FL
Posts: 374
I like vintage and antique fabric items and wound up talking to a lady whose business included such things. She swore by
Sodium Perborate
for cleaning them. She said it is available from the druggist only. She also instructed me to speak with the druggist regarding the best way(s) to use it as well as the safest.
Please note that I have never used it but am creating a pile of fabrics that need attention.
One more thing. About Oxyclean. My experience is that it works the best when dissolved in the hottest water possible and the fabric is allowed to soak until the water is cold. Repeated soakings were occasionally necessary.
Tide has chemical wetters that open fiber pores and allow stains, etc. to come out more easily. Had a conversation with a Tide corp. rep. on that one.
Good luck and thanks for sharing my interest. Please let us know what you finally do and how it works. My grandmother loved lacy linens and as she got older did not care for them properly. She passed on at 96 and left some gravy stained, etc. table cloths and napkins that did come clean. And the fabric survived!
Pat
Sodium Perborate
for cleaning them. She said it is available from the druggist only. She also instructed me to speak with the druggist regarding the best way(s) to use it as well as the safest.
Please note that I have never used it but am creating a pile of fabrics that need attention.
One more thing. About Oxyclean. My experience is that it works the best when dissolved in the hottest water possible and the fabric is allowed to soak until the water is cold. Repeated soakings were occasionally necessary.
Tide has chemical wetters that open fiber pores and allow stains, etc. to come out more easily. Had a conversation with a Tide corp. rep. on that one.
Good luck and thanks for sharing my interest. Please let us know what you finally do and how it works. My grandmother loved lacy linens and as she got older did not care for them properly. She passed on at 96 and left some gravy stained, etc. table cloths and napkins that did come clean. And the fabric survived!
Pat
#29
To clarify again, these were not in a meth lab. They were in the home of an addict. They smell because the house was full of black mold and mildew. There are only a few mildewy places on the quilts. The rat pee is a bigger concern. Fortunately, it appears to be concentrated in the quilt that also has cigarette burns going all the way through it.
Things are going much better than expected. Most of these things will be usable. The color catchers are working. I'm washing them in a warm cycle with a prewash and an extra rinse, and I'm drying them on low heat. If I can get them to the point where they don't smell, then I can make sure they're dry, and I can store them indoors without filling the house with mold funk. After that I'll have time to worry about further cleaning.
When they came home, they smelled so awful I had to open the SUV windows. Not a particularly powerful smell, but very oppressive. Like being trapped in a filthy drawer.
Things are going much better than expected. Most of these things will be usable. The color catchers are working. I'm washing them in a warm cycle with a prewash and an extra rinse, and I'm drying them on low heat. If I can get them to the point where they don't smell, then I can make sure they're dry, and I can store them indoors without filling the house with mold funk. After that I'll have time to worry about further cleaning.
When they came home, they smelled so awful I had to open the SUV windows. Not a particularly powerful smell, but very oppressive. Like being trapped in a filthy drawer.
Also use Retroclean....it works!
#30
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Upstate NY
Posts: 724
Definitely wash them, use a tub if you do not have front loader, lots more work. If they are as bad as you say I do not think you will hurt the value of the quilts, thankfully you have them and I wish you the best of luck getting them cleaned up. I have had good luck with the oxi cleaners, borax and baking soda gets the smells out of most things. Let us know how things go.
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