Auto
Bathroom
Bedroom
Boats
Dining Room
Floor Care
Home
Kitchen
Living Room
Nursery
Office
RVs
Stain Removal
Sunroom
RV Dealers pages

The Complete Idiots Guide to Green Cleaning

The Complete Idiots Guide to Green Cleaning
Mary's encyclopedia of cleaning tips
Product Details

$16.00

Sign-up for Mary's cleaning tips e-newsletter!
Click here
Visit Mary's Blog:
Amazing Cleaning tips 101|RSS
 
green cleaning your boat green cleaning tips for cars RV green cleaning tips cleaning your living area the green way green kitchen cleaning tips green cleaning tips for your sun room tips for green cleaning with babies and kids green cleaning tips for the office green cleaning tips for the bathroom green cleaning tips for bedrooms

Washing Baby Clothes

Never use chlorine bleach on baby clothing. It is toxic to adults and especially toxic to babies and children. Hydrogen peroxide removes baby formula from clothing and the yellowing in christening gowns. Mix a fifty-fifty solution of a 3% peroxide and water. Soak 30 minutes (longer if needed or use straight peroxide) then launder in cool water. Air dry. Dryer heat sets a stain so air dry to make certain the stain has been removed.

Baby safe laundry products are expensive. Try using a certified organic laundry detergent instead. One made by Bio-Kleen does an excellent job and is safe for baby clothes.

The reason most adult laundry detergents are not safe for babies (they aren't safe for adults either)is because they contain fillers often sawdust and other harsh additives. Those additives are missing from Green Seal approved products like Bio-Kleen.

Then use food grade distilled white vinegar in the rinse cycle and forget the expensive fabric softeners. Vinegar pulls the soap residue out of the clothes leaving the cloths soft and allergen free. Just make certain you use food grade distilled white vinegar. If the bottle does not safe food grade it is made from petroleum.

Catch our Stain Removal Guide for Washing Clothes to learn the right way to wash both baby and adult clothing.


© 1997-2012 Mary Findley