apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


5 Ways to Naturally Clean Whites

5-21-08whites.jpg

Going green means we're trying to avoid harmful chemicals in our everyday cleaning supplies. That pretty much nixes bleach altogether, but we've found a few natural ways to whiten laundry without the use of bleach...

 
 

• If you spill something dark, pour salt on it to absorb moisture from the spill.
• Apply white vinegar or lemon juice directly to stains.
• Soak whites in a solution of water and lemon juice.
• Wash whites with washing soda, similar to baking soda but with a lower pH.
• After washing, hang whites to dry in the sun. Sunlight naturally bleaches without setting stains the way a dryer does.

Give us your tips for ways to naturally clean whites in the comments below.

Photo: Blanca Bed Linens from Crate and Barrel

Tags

cleaning, green ideas, laundry, natural whitening, whites

Related Links

Share

Comments (23)

I would love to stop using bleach, but I have not been able to find anything else that comes close to keeping whites white. The suggestions offered above just don't cut it, and I don't have the option of hanging sheets, towels, etc. in sunlight. Does anyone have better suggestions? Thank you.

posted by BB on May 21st 2008 at 11:12am
view BB's profile

Washing soda only seems to -keep- things white for me. If you have things that are dingy or have lost their bright whiteness, it doesnt seem to restore that nice bright white, but if you always wash in washing soda, borax and fels naptha soap, it seems to help a lot.

posted by deirdre on May 21st 2008 at 11:32am
view deirdre's profile

I stopped bleaching whites, not because of the environment, but because I never have enough pure white things to do a full load of laundry. I live alone and my sheets are cream/tan. Bathroom towels are blue. Kitchen towels have green stripes. So it's pretty much just socks and washcloths. Neither of those get super stained in the course of normal use, and I just let the fact that they're no longer pure white bother me. I have bleach, for the occasions where I want something so clean it's completely disinfected (trash liner slips and something starts growing underneath it that I don't notice, etc) or if I spill cranberry juice on one of my few white t-shirts, but I've had the same small bottle for two years and it's maybe half gone. Does the environment thank me for just not caring anymore?

posted by lurker2209 on May 21st 2008 at 11:33am
view lurker2209's profile

Oops, should be "I just don't let the fact"

posted by lurker2209 on May 21st 2008 at 11:34am
view lurker2209's profile

Sunlight takes forever for blood or chocolate, though. The dangers to the enviroment aren't from household bleach, but rather from the major creators of organochlorines; paper bleaching, plastics manufacture and pesticides.

Soaking clothes in lemon juice is a great way to weaken the fibers.

Oxygen bleaches are an alternative.

posted by Palmetto on May 21st 2008 at 11:44am
view Palmetto's profile

I have white pillowcases with dark fabric trim. My head has caused some yellowing of the white fabric, but I can't bleach 'em. Do you think the lemon juice solution will help?

posted by GHB on May 21st 2008 at 11:53am
view GHB's profile

GHB try a bleach pen and/or handwashing it with a light bleach solution

posted by nickel525 on May 21st 2008 at 12:15pm
view nickel525's profile

I used Melaluca's MelaBright colour safe brightener.
It works just like colour safe bleach but without the phosphates associated with regular laundry soap.

posted by revolution9 on May 21st 2008 at 12:20pm
view revolution9's profile

am i the only one who just can't let go of that divine public-pool chlorine smell? there's no substitute!

posted by pinko on May 21st 2008 at 1:33pm
view pinko's profile

I think I won with having the best tip for making whites EXTREMELY white...generic aspirin. The kind you get at Walgreens or Cvs. Just put 3-4 in your load and tahdah...you will be surprised:)

posted by Legsly39 on May 21st 2008 at 6:13pm
view Legsly39's profile

Pinko: LOL! I soak my fabric shower-curtain liners in a bleach solution when they get mildew at the bottoms, and then throw them in the washer. When I hang them up, they still have that faint scent that says "clean" to me, too!

posted by Jane on May 21st 2008 at 6:17pm
view Jane's profile

I don't know if it still snows in Chicago, but a traditional way is to hang white linen and cotton and let it freeze. It's said to bleach it.

Guess you'll have to wait 6 months to try it out ....

posted by Deb of Oz on May 22nd 2008 at 3:42am
view Deb of Oz's profile

Sarah, get out of my head!!! I was just looking into this the other day as well! Again, great tips! Thanks!

posted by Devon on May 22nd 2008 at 4:50am
view Devon's profile

Can't wait to try the aspirin trick!

And I wish I could still buy a small bottle of chlorine bleach for the occasional skirmish with mildew. Recently I bought "thick" bleach simply because it was in a smaller format, only to realize later that it had other harsh cleansers in it.

posted by luna on May 22nd 2008 at 6:51am
view luna's profile

Actually, I ran into this problem last year and found two GREAT solutions that actually seem to work better than bleach. They're related, too.

The first is hydrogen peroxide... just dilute some with water and add to a stain. The best part about this is that it seems to work on colors too (check, though -- your mileage may vary).

The second is OxyClean, or like... oxygen bleach. Which apparently breaks down to form hydrogen peroxide. OxyClean has gotten all kinds of stains out of clothes for me and also done an incredible job brightening whites. Just soak overnight and clean the next day.

Geez, sounds like a testimonial!

posted by betsbillabong on May 22nd 2008 at 6:54am
view betsbillabong's profile

Here's an ancient Korean secret, no joke. Korean people have been documented to have a long history of wearing white clothing, before washing machine times. Apparently what they did then, and what most housewives continue to do today (including my mom), is to boil their whites with a bit of soap. You can use detergent, oxyclean, whatever's your poison. The key is to use only a little of the soap and then boil it for hours. It preserves the fabric and will get it spotlessly white without using any bleach. I did this once and my roomates thought I was nuts because they looked in the pot hoping for some soup and instead I had a big vat of white washcloths bubbling away on the stove.

posted by babibi on May 22nd 2008 at 11:41am
view babibi's profile

I've always known that direct sunlight turns your white clothes yellowish, so beware.

posted by pantzini on May 25th 2008 at 7:40am
view pantzini's profile

It doesn't remove spots/stains but if you want yellowed or greyed whites bright nothing beats Mrs. Stewart's blueing.

No fiber damage, either.

http://www.mrsstewart.com/

Just don't overdose or you'll turn everything sky blue.

posted by Slim on May 26th 2008 at 10:01am
view Slim's profile

I've got an aspirin experiment brewing in the washer right now! Put it in with white sheets, some of my grayest and most disgusting socks and a shirt. Can't wait to see the results! :)

posted by aspaceinteriors on June 21st 2008 at 12:42pm
view aspaceinteriors's profile

Did the aspirin trick work?

posted by Coopers_mama on July 22nd 2008 at 11:36am
view Coopers_mama's profile

So.... after reviewing lots and lots of websites (and verifying with mizz. martha stewizzle) to figure out how to get my whites whiter, I decided to go the vinegar way. Holy smokes - IT WORKS!!!! not only were my towels really really white, but they have never felt so soft! I am SOLD. I went to target and bought three big bottles of vinegar, and now I will use it on everything.

posted by Coopers_mama on July 24th 2008 at 7:31pm
view Coopers_mama's profile

I will never stop using bleach, until HAZMAT has me arrested

posted by OriginalNancy on March 19th 2009 at 7:02pm
view OriginalNancy's profile

Check out an organic or natural store and you can probably get a more eco-friendly bleach alternative. I tend to get either oxygen or hydrogen powder there. I have also heard that Hydrogen peroxide works miracles- it turns my skin pretty white when I use it on a cut!

posted by Nolann on March 20th 2009 at 2:27pm
view Nolann's profile

Feeds

RSS icon Chicago

+ City Feeds