Cleaning

Our Top 30 Household Stains in One Quick and Easy Stain Removal Guide

Kids aren’t predictable, and neither is the removal of stains. Because as parents, we’ve got better things to do than sit around trying to remove lipstick from walls, chewing gum from clothing or even worse, poo from carpet!

That’s why we’ve created this quick and easy stain removal guide to help you remove all things obscure from all the things. PLUS, share your top stain removal tips and you could walk away with a gorgeous Provincial Lane rug thanks to Carpet Court!

1.  Clothing

  1. Blood: Use hydrogen peroxide to get blood out of fabrics. Rub directly into the stain then wash with cold soapy water and dry.
  2. Coffee:  If you missed you mouth due to a severe lack of caffeine (highly likely in the first 6 months of a new baby in the house), sponge the stain thoroughly then soak in a bucket of super-hot water for about half an hour before machine washing.
  3. Food oils:  Spilt oil on your boobs eating pizza and garlic bread on the couch while binge watching chick flicks? Rub cornflour into the area and lightly brush off to remove excess oil, cover again completely with more cornflour and enjoy a glass of wine let sit for a few hours. Shake the excess flour off before putting through a wash cycle.
  4. Grass Stains: Rubbing alcohol is a solvent and awesome at removing the green pigment from grass. Wet the grass stain with a sponge using isopropyl rubbing alcohol, let it dry, rinse with cold water then rub liquid detergent (not eco) into the stain. Rinse with cold water then machine wash.
  5. Red wine:  Suck on it Position it over a bucket or bowl and repeatedly pour white vinegar over it until gone. If it’s an older stain you can rub it with some white vinegar then bicarbonate of soda. The stain will change colour (grey) and you can rinse with the vinegar immediately before putting through a wash cycle.
  6. Sunscreen, make-up or build-up of skin oils: Rub normal dishwashing detergent (not eco) into the stain, when it begins to feel like jelly the stain is water soluble and can be washed out in a normal washing machine cycle.
  7. Vomit: Covered in your little one’s upchuck? Remove any large chunks then soak and agitate in cold water before washing in warm (not hot) water, rinse, and inspect. If colour stain remains, machine wash using chlorine bleach if safe for the fabric, or with all fabric bleach.
  8. Chewing Gum: So they’ve come home gum over their clothes! Pick off as much as you can and then fold up clothing, leaving the gum facing outwards on top. Place in a plastic bag (if you can) and seal up. Place in the freezer for a couple of hours. Remove and scrape off the gum straight away with an old blunt knife or similar but be careful it doesn’t cut the fabric!
  9. Buy new clothes.

2.  Carpet

  1. Blood:  Use a 50/50 solution of hydrogen peroxide and warm water, spray onto the stain then sprinkle a little salt over the top, rub with a clean cloth. When you’re happy with the result, wash through a normal wash cycle.
  2. Ink:  If the kids decide to take to your carpet with ink, wash the stain immediately with cut lemon. Plenty of lemon must be used and vigorously rubbed into the carpet with a clean flannel. Allow to dry then vacuum.
  3. Mud:  To remove mud marks, sprinkle salt or bicarbonate of soda over the marks and leave to dry, then vacuum.
  4. Nail Polish. Using a clear, non-acetone nail polish remover, blot the area with a clean white cloth. Don’t rub it. Removal will take time but it will work. Be sure to spot test the colour fastness of your carpet in an inconspicuous area first.
  5. Poo … yes you read that right, poo: Because you can be guaranteed there will come a time in your life as a parent when you’ll be cleaning poo from your carpet. Do your future self a favour, buy a product called Bac Out (you’ll need to buy it online, you can’t get it in Australia. Bac-Out has enzyme-producing cultures that eat poo from poo stains – great for other organic stains too like vomit). After picking up any remaining poo pieces from the carpet with toilet paper and flushing down the toilet (don’t flush baby wipes), using baby wipes pinch any smaller pieces of poo from the carpet fibres. Spray the area with Bac-Out until damp and leave to soak for 5 minutes. Using an old clean towel, blot the area dry. If there is any remaining residue (or if you’re still disturbed about the fact you had poo in your carpet), mix eco laundry detergent with warm water and gently scrub with a clean towel.
  6. Smells: (toddler poo anyone?) Sprinkling bicarbonate of soda all over the carpet then vacuuming will deodorise the carpet.
  7. Urine:  Pour a little warm water on the area of the pee to dilute. This makes it easier to soak up if already dry too. Place a folded towel over the pee soaked area of the carpet and apply pressure by stepping firmly on top of it (wash the towel later with laundry detergent and bleach if the towel is white). Apply Bac Out to the area as you would poo stains, then clean the area by mixing eco laundry detergent with warm water and gently scrub with a clean towel. Deodorise with bicarbonate of soda.
  8. Vomit:  Pick up any chunks with paper towel and put it in the bin. Pour a little warm water on the area as you would pee to dilute. Place a folded towel over the vomit soaked area and apply pressure by stepping firmly on top of it. Once dried as much as possible, mix baking soda and corn-starch together in a bowl and sprinkle on the stain. Let the mix absorb for 15 minutes then vacuum. Use Bac Out to sponge clean any remaining residue as per ‘Poo’ cleaning instructions.
  9. Buy new carpet.

3.  Walls

  1. Black Marks. Thought toothpaste was just for teeth? When objects rub against a wall they can cause black marks which can be removed by toothpaste. Rub the toothpaste gently over the marks and leave for a few minutes, then wash off with a soft, damp cloth.
  2. Crayon:  Here’s a delicious way to remove crayon art from your walls. Rub mayonnaise on the crayon and let it sit for about 10 minutes. Wipe the surface clean with a damp cloth and volia.
  3. Lipstick:  Dip a white cloth in make-up remover and gently wipe over the lipstick mark working it from the outside in. Once removed, give the wall a quick wash with warm soapy water and a clean cloth.
  4. Mould:  Make a solution of chlorine bleach (like domestos) and water – 1 part bleach to 3 parts water. Get a stiff-bristled brush like an old toothbrush and scrub the blackened area. Rinse thoroughly with warm soapy water and dry.
  5. Pen:  Mix a watery paste of bicarb and water then rub it over the mark with a micro fibre cloth.
  6. Permanent Marker. Soak a clean cloth in isopropyl alcohol and blot the area of the permanent marker to minimise rubbing or scrubbing. Reapply and repeat if the mark is still present.
  7. Repaint the house.

4.  Miscellaneous

  1. Beetroot: Worst. Stain. Everrrrrr! Treat it as soon as it occurs (if possible). Soak the garment or carpet with cold water. Mix a small amount of strong dish washing detergent in a bowl with a bit of cold water and rub the area of the stain gently with your fingers. This can be really effective if you do this straight away and the stain isn’t too bad. Sadly, if the stain refused to move, try treating it with biological detergent the same as you would a poo or pee stain.
  2. Kitchen Oils: If your kitchen rangehood, overhead cupboards or ceiling are yellowing or becoming coated in cooking fats, simply dab a clean, white cleaning cloth in tea tree oil and scrub/wipe over the area. The tea tree oil breaks down the cooking fats making them a breeze to wipe away. You can also use tea tree oil to break down the gummy residue of sticky labels making for easy removal of annoying sticky things like jam or coffee jar labels.
  3. Kitchen Stone Benchtops: Got stone benchtops? Buff them with car polish to leave a thin, invisible film that helps reduce the risk of stains.
  4. Random Fabric Stains:  If you’re a linens kinda gal and use tablecloths or lots of cushions, lightly spray them with cheap hairspray. Spills will bead on the surface and can be easily wiped away which means no stains! And the hairspray easily comes out in a normal wash cycle.
  5. Buy a new house.

And as hard as it is to keep an eye on our kidlets All. The. Time, prevention is better than cure. Keep horrible stuff like textas, paint, pens and lipstick stored out of reach of little, curious fingers and save yourself the headache.

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enter-to-win

To celebrate the new range of Provincial Lane rugs by Darren Palmer, we’re giving one lucky reader their choice of rug from the Provincial Lane Collection at Carpet Court! Any size, any style, valued at up to $1790.

Simply complete the entry form below and tell us in the comments below your best STAIN REMOVAL TIP! Come back and enter daily if you like, just leave a new stain removal tip each time to have a valid entry! It’s that easy!

GOOD LUCK!

 

Win a Provincial Lane Rug valued at up to $1790 thanks to Carpet Court

Avatar of Belinda Jennings

Belinda's a passionate advocate for community and connection. As the founder of the Mum Central Network she’s committed to celebrating the journey that is Australian parenthood. Mum to two cheeky boys, and wife to her superstar husband, they live a busy but crazy lifestyle in Adelaide. Great conversation, close friends and good chocolate are her chosen weapons for daily survival. Oh, and bubbles. Champagne is key.

423 Comments

  1. Avatar of Ying Ying TAN
    Ying Ying TAN Reply

    Rubbing lemon juice on berry stains before rinsing, detergent and washing as per normal would give an extra boost lifting those stains!

  2. Avatar of Andreea Nicolescu
    Andreea Nicolescu Reply

    Bicarbonate Soda on wet stains(wine, juice, any), lifts the stain and also the smell that can appear from being wet

  3. Avatar of christine morris
    christine morris Reply

    Use Vinegar and Bicarbonate for tough stains on carpets , the bicarbonate soda also soaks up pet accidents 🙂

  4. Avatar of shadow88

    Get the dog to lick it right out of the carpet… well, actually… maybe that doesn’t work, guess that’s the reason i desperately need a new rug to hide the repercussions from my silly assumption!

  5. Avatar of Juanita Thorn
    Juanita Thorn Reply

    I’ve always be told that Eucalyptus Oil is a great stain remover and I know Mum has used it to remove stains from some of my clothing – but then …my Mum is good at things like that – It probably wouldn’t work for me 😀

  6. Avatar of Julia Mason
    Julia Mason Reply

    Paper towel and lots of patting! Otherwise, I agree, prevention is better that cure!

  7. Avatar of Gianfranco Leon
    Gianfranco Leon Reply

    I always use white vinegar mixed with sodium bicarbonate, that is such a powerful mix try the tiles, even the laundry, also white vinegar with hot water is great for your tired feet.

  8. Avatar of Amy R

    Vinegar and Bicarb soda is great for getting rid of stains and smells out of carpet 🙂

  9. Avatar of Michelle

    Get to the stain early & don’t let it set, bicarb has always been an effective stain remover for most of my problem stains.

  10. Avatar of Kat Rogers
    Kat Rogers Reply

    Dont scrub strains into the carpet and smear them ….. remember sprinkle, dab and pat , that way your not spreading what ever the stain is

  11. Avatar of jayla1987

    I mix a little mixture of nappies an and water into a paste and run into Carpet works wonders

  12. Avatar of Angela

    A mix of salt and white vinegar. It generally helps at removing carpet stains.

  13. Avatar of Karina Lee
    Karina Lee Reply

    To remove blood stains from items like mattresses, I use a few drops of hydrogen peroxide on the stain, then pat dry with dry cloth. It actually works!

  14. Avatar of Laura Powers
    Laura Powers Reply

    Rub light carpet stains with a mixture of 2 tablespoons salt dissolved in 1/2 cup white vinegar. Let the solution dry, then vacuum.

  15. Avatar of keldo

    Dawn dish liquid, hydrogen peroxide – mix, then dab on stain and wash. Doesn’t bleach colours as far as i have tried, and if it is a tough stain sprinkle bi-carb on top and allow to dry then wash.

  16. Avatar of Nicola James
    Nicola James Reply

    Bicarbonate soda on wet stains as soon as possible – works wonders!

  17. Avatar of Christina

    Baby wipes clean just about everything & anything.. Best tip is to get on to it right away..

  18. Avatar of Catherine Gierak
    Catherine Gierak Reply

    My top stain removal tip is to get to the stain as early as possible. Don’t give it time to set further.

  19. Avatar of Brianna Taylor
    Brianna Taylor Reply

    As obvious as it is, good old glen 20 surface spray. I use it on EVERYTHING!

  20. Avatar of Belinda Mouk
    Belinda Mouk Reply

    Shaving cream is great for general carpet stains. Apply to the stain and let it sit for 30 minutes.

  21. Avatar of Kylie M. Stead
    Kylie M. Stead Reply

    Bicarbonate of soda paste rubbed lightly into stain and let dry for 5-10 mins then add vinegar mixed with vanilla essence (optional, or use any nice smelling essential oil) after it dissolves all the bicarbonate of soda scrub with a stiff brush. Wipe down afterwards with a warm damp cloth.
    Gets most stains your kids can come up with. And is environmental friendly.

  22. Avatar of Maria

    Rubbing alcohol is great for removal of ink stains from leather. Fresh ink stains are easier to remove and usually come out easily, while older stains may require repeat treatment.

  23. Avatar of K Innes

    My go to is always bicarbonate before anything else touches it.

  24. Avatar of Yasmin

    I’m a big fan of wet ones they seem to be quick and close by if anything falls , otherwise something that soaks up spills quickly followed by bicarbonate soda and water on the stain . Plain Salt is also good for soaking up liquid spills . Thank you

  25. Avatar of Kate Fuller
    Kate Fuller Reply

    I use baby wipes for most things, what can I say….I’m a lazy mum & if its easy ill do it

  26. Avatar of Amanda

    Tomato soup or pumpkin puree stains? Don’t waste your time trying. Just buy new clothes.

  27. Avatar of Michelle M
    Michelle M Reply

    Every parent is faced with their kids clothes being covered in those pesky grass stains! Never fear, as they can be removed successfully with some plain white toothpaste (not the gel type) and a toothbrush. Onto the stain, squeeze a small amount of the toothpaste, then dip the toothbrush in clean water and use it to scrub away at the stain. Repeat this process as often as required to treat all of the stain(s) on the clothes. Give the clothes a good soak in laundry washing booster/stain remover powder, for one to two hours, then rinse the area and wash the clothing as usual. Grass stains be gone!!

  28. Avatar of Gillian Harridge
    Gillian Harridge Reply

    Toothpaste, depending on the colour of fabric, this works well.

  29. Avatar of Evelyn

    Get to it right away, and use baby wipes! I’ve used baby wipes to remove stains from clothing and the carpet before that I thought wouldn’t budge. Some stains just won’t budge, but if it’s gonna come out, a baby wipe will do it quickly and easily!

  30. Avatar of Claire Thrower
    Claire Thrower Reply

    For stubborn stains i mix up a paste of biocarb soda and water let it soak in then try and remove stain, i do this a few times and it works perfectly!

  31. Avatar of Beksmum

    Bi-carb and white vinegar, not only get the stains out but the odours as well

  32. Avatar of Brooke

    Unbelievably, Dettol surface spray (Country Fresh) just for the scent, gets rid of toilet training wee on carpet. Every.Single.Time.Without.Fail!

  33. Avatar of TanyaCrerar
    TanyaCrerar Reply

    For liquid spills on carpet I use cooking salt- lots and lots of cooking salt! When it has soaked up all of the liquid, simply vacuum up the salt.

  34. Avatar of Anna M

    Soda Water is fantastic for things like cordial stains. Just pour it on and then soak up with a towel and keep going until the stain is removed.

  35. Avatar of Linda Luczak
    Linda Luczak Reply

    Tea tree oil or bicarbonate of soda & vinegar works a treat.

  36. Avatar of Suzanne Ware
    Suzanne Ware Reply

    Baby wipes! They got a red oil based crayon out of my brand new carpet when they said (google) nothing would get it out!

  37. Avatar of Lara Haynes Stewart
    Lara Haynes Stewart Reply

    Bicarb soda mixed with water leave 5 minutes & it should lift away

  38. Avatar of Kate Slack
    Kate Slack Reply

    Baby wipes they seem to have the magical ability to remove anything!

  39. Avatar of Josette

    I tried almost everything that I’ve heard of but nothing works 🙁

  40. Avatar of Kristina Walker
    Kristina Walker Reply

    White vinegar, bicarb of soda, dabbing with a neutral coloured cloth!

  41. Avatar of Tennille

    I recently had curtains so stained with ink there was no saving them so I dyed them! They look like new.

  42. Avatar of JessK

    Don’t panic! Whatever the stain is, the most important thing is not to panic – that will have you scrubbing away and rubbing the stain further into the fabric / carpet. Take your time soaking up the stain with paper towels, then dab with water to loosen what remains, soak up with paper towels again, and repeat. The aim is to get as much of the stain out as possible before using any other aides that could inadvertently cause spreading of the original stain.

  43. Avatar of Barbara Fehmel
    Barbara Fehmel Reply

    never let a stain dry, gentle rub it with a weak solution of water and Eucalyptus oil, then wash immediatly

  44. Avatar of Katherine Hartshorne
    Katherine Hartshorne Reply

    For urine – immediately soak up as much as possible with white paper towels, then pour a solution of half water and half white vinegar onto the stain, leave it for 5 minutes, then soak up as much moisture as you can with a clean towel. Place a dry folded up towel over the stain with a heavy book over it and leave it for a few hours to soak up as much moisture as possible. Hey presto stain is gone!!

  45. Avatar of Dale Pearce
    Dale Pearce Reply

    Club Soda + Salt = Non-Toxic Stain Remover
    1. Blot fresh stain to soak up excess liquid.
    2. Sprinkle stained area liberally with salt (but not too liberally or you’ll be vacuuming salt up for weeks, trust me on this one).
    3. Pour club soda or seltzer water over stained area.
    4. Leave soda and salt on the stained area for a few hours or overnight.
    5. Re-blot area to soak up excess water.
    6. Vacuum area to remove salt.

  46. Avatar of Bronie Elson
    Bronie Elson Reply

    I have learnt the most important thing is to scotchguard and to treat spills straight away. And dab don’t rub

  47. Avatar of Lolli Mac

    For oils and greasey stains use bicarb soda leave for 30 mins. Then using an old dry toothbrush scrub off. Repeat once. Then put through normal wash with pink napisan.

  48. Avatar of Maree Gray
    Maree Gray Reply

    Immediately soak up as much of the spill as possible with paper towel

  49. Avatar of Rebecca Yangzon
    Rebecca Yangzon Reply

    Baby powder works a treat on oil and curry stains, vinegar is wonderful to brighten clothes and for toilets.So many great stain remove tips and tricks.

  50. Avatar of Pinar Krajcik
    Pinar Krajcik Reply

    For most liquid stains I put baby powder as quick as possible then wait for it to dry, vacuum it up and it smells as fresh as a baby’s bottom!

  51. Avatar of Rachael

    I use vinegar to get stains and smells out of everything – works great on tupperware containers and tea towels!

  52. Avatar of Emma Bauer
    Emma Bauer Reply

    I got my white dress caught in the car door. Left a big greasy stain.

    I applied dishwashing liquid to the dry skirt. I couldn’t believe it came out before my eyes!

    Once off. Then you can wash like normal.

  53. Avatar of Stacey

    Bi carb soda and vinegar is always my go to. It gets everything out of everything.

  54. Avatar of ggrugger

    There are many types of stains but best tip I have is act fast and don’t let the offending material soak in or set.

  55. Avatar of Neva Beaumont
    Neva Beaumont Reply

    With a toddler in our house, stains are a big part of our life, but for stains on hard surfaces I use toothpaste and it works a treat every time!!!

  56. Avatar of Nyssa Johnson
    Nyssa Johnson Reply

    bicarb will remove pretty much everything and when that won’t work, I think Gumption is unstoppable!

  57. Avatar of Jade

    Jade
    Use mentholated spirits to remove texta/ink from fabric couches children have decided to draw on.

  58. Avatar of Cecilia Warrick
    Cecilia Warrick Reply

    To remove ink stains from fabric, soak the item in milk! It really works. 🙂

  59. Avatar of kcj162026

    To remove any wax from a rug, cover the wax with a brown grocery bag (one layer) and press with a warm iron.

  60. Avatar of marypreston
    marypreston Reply

    Orange juice/tomato stains will just disappear if the garment is laundered normally and then hung in full sunlight. There is some sort of chemical reaction because of acidity.

  61. Avatar of Kathryn Watson
    Kathryn Watson Reply

    Vinegar is my go to for food stains on clothes – apply vinegar liberally, leave overnight, spray on stain remover, rub lightly and wash as normal. Works wonders for things like cherries, blackberries

  62. Avatar of Rachel amanatidis
    Rachel amanatidis Reply

    Best stain removal tip to remove sticky residue is to dab stain with a damp cloth with eucalyptus oil .. Leave for a few mins then using the same cloth gently rub

  63. Avatar of Hayley Maree
    Hayley Maree Reply

    Ive found hairspray to be great to help get the pen marks off my sons white school shirts

  64. Avatar of Maria Braund
    Maria Braund Reply

    Ink: If it’s a fountain pen stain, the best thing for it is rotten milk. Place 300ml of milk in an open-mouth container and leave it out in the sunshine until it goes all lumpy and yucky. It’s those lumps you want to place onto the stains. It will break them down and then you can wash them away.

  65. Avatar of apwed

    hair spray works great for pen spray leave for a few minutes then wash off with warm soapy water

  66. Avatar of silver101

    I agree with many of the other comments but if you don’t act fast with stains they can become a real problem with lingering shadowy remains left.

  67. Avatar of Debrah Bassett
    Debrah Bassett Reply

    try not to let stains dry they are easy to remove if you do it straight away

  68. Avatar of bydesign.3
    bydesign.3 Reply

    stains – AARRRRGGGGGGGGHHHHHHH!!!!!
    I’m madly noting all those below and all those yet to come.
    My suggestion – avoid them at all costs :))

  69. Avatar of Joanne T Ferguson

    Using Himalayan pink salt on carpets, works every time for me!
    Better than any expensive bottle or spray…is like my secret, unique recipe!
    Stains disappear, even the most stubborn or challenging ingredients, almost literally before one’s eyes!
    Is like a carpet stain magic trick done in front of an audience with wonderment and suprize!

  70. Avatar of Heather Hopley
    Heather Hopley Reply

    If you have biro ink on fabric (like in shirt pockets grrr!) try either toothpaste or hairspray. Depending on the fabric, you should have success removing the ink with ether one of these.

  71. Avatar of Nicole Williams
    Nicole Williams Reply

    Aeroguard works wonders to remove felt pen. Spray, let it sit and scrub clean!!

  72. Avatar of Diana

    Definitely address the stain ASAP, and treat with eucalyptus! Works a treat

  73. Avatar of Leanne Baker
    Leanne Baker Reply

    For a chemical free way to clean your highchair straps use a paste of baking soda mixed with lemon juice, work in with an old toothbrush and rinse or wipe clean and leave in direct sunlight to dry. For extremely stubborn stains put lemon juice directly back onto the straps before placing in the sunlight, the lemon works like a bleach.

  74. Avatar of Musicveg

    Sponge up using very absorbent cloth, then use Bicarb soda sprinkled on stains or spills,let it dry and vacuum, simple but effective.

  75. Avatar of Kristy F

    Once you get “court” with a “carpet” stain you need to get them quick before they get deep in the carpet otherwise they are hard to remove. I usually use a carpet cleaning spray and if I can get it quick enough it usually does the job.

  76. Avatar of stephen elsworthy
    stephen elsworthy Reply

    I get stains out with lemon juice to help break it up for such things as red wine, followed by damp cloth with soda water

  77. Avatar of Trish Leonard
    Trish Leonard Reply

    I find that Window cleaner spray (Windex) gets most small stains out pretty quickly and easily.

  78. Avatar of tizz erina
    tizz erina Reply

    If it’s a tough stain, rub lemon juice over the top, or lay a slice of lemon on the stain.

  79. Avatar of Kell

    Bi Carb on Puppy pee …. blot up then sprinkle the Bi Carb, Vacuum the next day. The pup won’t return to that spot.

  80. Avatar of Bianca Bonakey
    Bianca Bonakey Reply

    To remove ink from clothes – put toothpaste on generously and let it dry then wash normally

  81. Avatar of Alison Lee
    Alison Lee Reply

    I love using white vinegar for stain removal! Its natural and effective!

  82. Avatar of Scott Crumlin
    Scott Crumlin Reply

    A piece of scotch tape to get pencil marks of wallpaper; press lightly and peel, the pencil lifts off in the top fibres and leaves the rest intact.

  83. Avatar of Irene Fernandas
    Irene Fernandas Reply

    To remove furniture indentations from pure wool carpet place a tea towel over the area and then press with a warm iron. The heat will lift the fibres.

  84. Avatar of Michelle

    Take armchair or bean bag, position squarely over unsightly stain. Relax.

  85. Avatar of humptydumpedme
    humptydumpedme Reply

    Boiling water in a bucket with a cup of nappy sand has always worked for me

  86. Avatar of manishah

    remove chocolate stain from carpet with cold water & dishwashing liquid. hot water will set the stain!

  87. Avatar of Dawn Taylor
    Dawn Taylor Reply

    Bio Zet is good for cleaning up Pet accidents. It neutralises the smell, and they don’t keep marking out their territory.

  88. Avatar of Rachel K

    If you’ve got rust on clothing it can be removed with either white vinegar or lemon juice. Lay the clothing or fabric out on an old towel and pour a small amount of white vinegar directly on the stain – or rub a cut lemon half on the stain. Saturate it thoroughly, then blot it with a clean white towel. Lay outside in the sunshine until the stain starts to fade, then launder as usual. More extensive or stubborn stains benefit from a dose of commercial rust remover, found at hardware stores.

  89. Avatar of Lisa

    Blu tac, play do and similar goo can be used to remove itself. Roll a fresh ball over the offending mark and it attaches itself to the ball and presto, gone.

  90. Avatar of Lucia Saal
    Lucia Saal Reply

    Peanut butter to remove gum on fabrics and works great on gum in hair too!

  91. Avatar of Fiona Loadsman
    Fiona Loadsman Reply

    Use a tray or adult bib tea towel, carpet cover so no mess in first place

  92. Avatar of Heather Hopley
    Heather Hopley Reply

    Vinegar and baking soda can remove stubborn stains for a variety of fabric, including carpet. Do an inconspicuous test first.

  93. Avatar of Faye

    I find that a paste of bicarbonate and vinegar is cheap and effective for most stains without being too strong as to bleach the surrounding area (especially carpet!) so I can use with confidence.

  94. Avatar of James Pizzey
    James Pizzey Reply

    bicarbonate of soda all over the carpet then vacuuming will deodorise the carpet.

  95. Avatar of Ashley Beech
    Ashley Beech Reply

    Methylated Spirits on clothes stains, especially school uniforms!

  96. Avatar of Nicola Lee Brown
    Nicola Lee Brown Reply

    White vinegar helps with baking soda……………Spray some Lavender to refresh smell.

  97. Avatar of Catherine Burns
    Catherine Burns Reply

    Spray cheap hairspray over the surface of your outdoor tablecloths, cushions etc. Spills can then be wiped away with a paper towel and the hairspray will come out easily in the wash.

  98. Avatar of Jacqueline Dodd
    Jacqueline Dodd Reply

    BiCarb Soda and Vinegar. Make a paste, put on stain! Wait and vaccum when dry! Great for smells too.

  99. Avatar of 78DaysofSummer
    78DaysofSummer Reply

    baby wipes have always done the trick for us with spills on our carpets, baking soda does well too!

  100. Avatar of Alex

    Get on to it quickly! Don’t leave it for later/tomorrow/next week/never. If you move fast you’ll have better success (& blot, don’t rub!)

  101. Avatar of Ashlee Ford
    Ashlee Ford Reply

    Sard stain remover stick is amazing. works well with red lipstick!

  102. Avatar of Angela Rhodes
    Angela Rhodes Reply

    White wine vinegar seems to work on many things…including red wine stains.

  103. Avatar of Tess Eames
    Tess Eames Reply

    Bicarb soda will help pull throw up stains out of carpets and fabric couches, unfortunately with our lil family including a queasy cat we learnt this only too well!

  104. Avatar of sars_angelchik
    sars_angelchik Reply

    To remove an oil stain simply use ordinary dish washing liquid- just a little drop on the stain and rub it in until it goes white, then rinse it off with some vinegar and wash in the machine as usual. It really works! I also find that Omo ultimate is great for getting out a lot of tough stains.

  105. Avatar of Michelle Halusko Tsimouris
    Michelle Halusko Tsimouris Reply

    I love using a magic sponge to get rid of pencil & black scuff marks from the wall

  106. Avatar of Debbie Moody
    Debbie Moody Reply

    Always test any solution/detergent on an inconspicuous area of carpet prior to treating a stain.

  107. Avatar of Panda Jess
    Panda Jess Reply

    I like to mix lemon juice, dishwashing liquid and warm water together, before applying it to juice stains in the carpet. Then just pat it dry with a white cloth. It really works.

  108. Avatar of Nicole Muller
    Nicole Muller Reply

    Bicarbonate soda and vinegar. Make into a paste and spread it over. Then let it dry and vacuum it off. Works for lots of things

  109. Avatar of Andrea Foley
    Andrea Foley Reply

    I use morning heaps of morning fresh with a toothbrush it works a treat and nice smell. Also eucalyptus oil get blue pen out also.

  110. Avatar of Robyn Smithwick
    Robyn Smithwick Reply

    Always gently lift off the bulk of the mud with a broad bladed knife and if possible let the rest dry. [NEVER USE water on dried mud as it only makes it soak into carpet.] When dry simply vacuum. All gone!

  111. Avatar of Teresa Clark
    Teresa Clark Reply

    Wipe up what i can, then apply a mixture of bi carb soda mixed with vinegar, let it dry then vacuum it off, i find that it works with lots of things that get spilt.

  112. Avatar of Kelly Sherwood Brown
    Kelly Sherwood Brown Reply

    I like using baking soda and vinegar to remove stains. Its natural and effective. 🙂

  113. Avatar of michelle

    hands…. food colour etc. A baking soda and water paste. Pub in gently, works a treat. Rinse with vinegar and repeat if necessary

  114. Avatar of Maxy

    Tried all the suggestions above, below etc etc! My usual last step is turn over the rug!

  115. Avatar of Joanna Hayward
    Joanna Hayward Reply

    Walls – magic eraser. Nothing beats it! Carpet – nothing beats getting to the problem asap! Never leave it til later!

  116. Avatar of Nikki Cashion
    Nikki Cashion Reply

    My top tip is ……. call my mum , she always knows how to get rid of stains.

  117. Avatar of Sally Jones
    Sally Jones Reply

    Turmeric Stains! Toughest of them all. A tablespoon of bicarb mixed with juice of half a lemon and a good squeeze of detergent. Mix all together and then rub onto the stain and leave for a good 30-45 minutes. Repeat if needed & rinse. Works a treat for those bright yellow turmeric stains!

  118. Avatar of Karen

    Baking Soda with a little vinegar is fabulous, once dry, Baking soda sprinkled on the carpet with a few drops of your favourite essential oil as a a carpet deoderiser and freshner…. luv Baking soda 🙂

  119. Avatar of Melinda Bolitho
    Melinda Bolitho Reply

    Whitening toothpaste on laminate benches will remove most stubborn stains. Failing that it’s best not to let your husband leave his spanners lying around where they could get wet and rusty 🙂

  120. Avatar of Andieharrie
    Andieharrie Reply

    soda water seems to work with red wine and coffee stains too
    pour on and blot with paper towel removes the stain for you

  121. Avatar of Kylie Parremore
    Kylie Parremore Reply

    Sugar water is fantastic cleans anything off the walls like a breeze!!

  122. Avatar of Kylie Clayton
    Kylie Clayton Reply

    We use Eucalyptus oil mixed with warm-hot water to get stains out of carpet, the fabric couch… And good old wonder soap for most stains on clothing.

  123. Avatar of Deborah Osborne
    Deborah Osborne Reply

    Don’t eat food in other rooms keep it at the kitchen table ,saves getting stains on carpet .

  124. Avatar of Zuzi

    With 2 small kids and a dog it is impossible to keep your carpets and rugs clean all the time – having a carpet that is easy to clean is the ideal solutions – unless you want to glad wrap your entire house.

  125. Avatar of margie sincoe
    margie sincoe Reply

    Eucalyptus oil in bucket to clean tiled or wooden floors, disinfects and cleans beautifully. Also works a treat at getting stains out of clothing, put a capful in the rinse cycle and it cleans clothing while also cleaning the washing machine.

  126. Avatar of Nicole Jennings
    Nicole Jennings Reply

    Baby Wipes are the best stain removal, they remove everything

  127. Avatar of Samala Cambridge
    Samala Cambridge Reply

    Depending on the stain. I do love a good scrub and or soak! Seems to always do the trick!

  128. Avatar of Kylie Travis
    Kylie Travis Reply

    Getting to it as soon as possible and a scrub with some anti-bac dish detergent usually does the trick for me!

  129. Avatar of Robyn Smithwick
    Robyn Smithwick Reply

    I know facial wipes are great for removing smudged eye make up.

  130. Avatar of Laura Scriven
    Laura Scriven Reply

    Baking soda is your best choice to quickly clean vomit or urine stains from your carpet. Wipe up what you can, then pour baking soda over the affected area and pat with a paper towel. Let the homemade mixture dry completely before vacuuming up the residue.

  131. Avatar of Lynnette Bull
    Lynnette Bull Reply

    Prevention tip. If my kids would like something other than water to drink, the glass/cup has to stay on the kitchen bench and be drunk there. Any spills are then easy to wipe as it is over tiles.

  132. Avatar of Mikaela Cowan
    Mikaela Cowan Reply

    To remove red wine stains,pour cool water over the stain, sprinkle with salt. When the salt turns pink pour boiling water over the stain and allow it to sit until stain is lifted and wash as usual!

  133. Avatar of Michelle

    simply dishwashing detergent and baking soda – It’s my ultimate stain remover that actually works on seriously set in stain.

  134. Avatar of Veronica Paterson
    Veronica Paterson Reply

    For old stuck in stains sprinkle some baking soda over the stain, then squeeze some lemon juice over the baking soda, work mixture into stain with a scrubbing brush & leave to completely dry……then vacuum.

  135. Avatar of Tess Howard
    Tess Howard Reply

    Deodorant or sweat stains are the ‘pits’! (hahaha, see what I did there?) A 2:1 solution of White Vinegar and water left to soak overnight should take care of it. And if any has turned white clothes slightly yellow, just coat with a paste of baking soda and let sit overnight then rinse the spot with White vinegar.

  136. Avatar of Maria Stone
    Maria Stone Reply

    Baking soda and lemon juice! Always does the trick and the lemon gives a refreshing scent – added bonus! Thank you for the opportunity to win tho fabulous rug!! 🙂

  137. Avatar of Nikki Foureur
    Nikki Foureur Reply

    Morning fresh dishwashing liquid on almost everything. If ther is. Some stain to soak up I do it first with bicarbonate soda.

  138. Avatar of Danielle Curtain
    Danielle Curtain Reply

    The calcified scum around taps, I soak a cloth in vinegar and soak the area for about an hour and depending how long the scum has been there depends on how easy it wipes off. I use vinegar for many other stains around the house too.

  139. Avatar of Nicola

    Turps removes greasy/fatty stains from clothing if you dab it on and then wash as normal!

  140. Avatar of Sharon Markwell
    Sharon Markwell Reply

    Eucalyptus Oil will remove even thick grease from your carpets, just don’t use too much. Dab lightly and you’ll be amazed.

  141. Avatar of Rebecca Foster
    Rebecca Foster Reply

    I spot clean the carpet with just warm water and an old towel, it works really well if you get to the stain straight away.

  142. Avatar of Sarahmary92
    Sarahmary92 Reply

    Letting stains soak overnight. I use bi carb soda and it’s fantastic

  143. Avatar of laureneve

    It’s amazing how great make-up wipes can be. They remove lots of stains and no wonder lots of clothing shops use them for make-up stains off clothes.

  144. Avatar of Kerry

    Bicarbonate soda is a great idea instead of expensive powders. Just sprinkle, leave for a while the vacuum.

  145. Avatar of Rebecca Costa
    Rebecca Costa Reply

    Hairspray great for pen/texta marks on shirts. Spray pen marks on shirts with hairspray, rub spot and it should come out. If not spray with hairspray, rub spot and put into wash!!

  146. Avatar of Debra Black
    Debra Black Reply

    Bi carb soda works a treat on most things for me .. Make a paste and leave till dry and vacuum up

  147. Avatar of Liz Dowhaluk
    Liz Dowhaluk Reply

    I have poured white wine over a red wine stain and the red disappeared. This worked on the table cloth as well as the carpet. Worked a treat. Then I neutralized the area with Soda water dabbing and taking up the moisture.

  148. Avatar of Kristy Lee Coles
    Kristy Lee Coles Reply

    I use vanish spot on liquid on any stains we have and leave it on the stain for an hour then put it in the wash and it is as good as new

  149. Avatar of Susan Harrison
    Susan Harrison Reply

    Grease from clothes, heat up the grease with an iron pile baby powder ( just the cheap stuff) put a piece of material over the powder and iron like mad. Leave for 15 mins for the powder to soak up the grease. Iron again to loosen it and then wash you may have to do a couple of times. But it has saved a few of my favourite shirts after a BBQ.

  150. Avatar of Melsie

    My best tip…dont drink wine near the carpet or let kids in your house…..ever!

  151. Avatar of Paula Harris
    Paula Harris Reply

    My tip…..spilt something nasty on your favorite heels? Buy some more. You can never have too many shoes 🙂

  152. Avatar of AmyMcC

    Gum, many stains on clothes and carpets can be removed using eucalyptus oil – either in the spray can form or just using the oil itself (soak it onto a cloth first and then rub onto the stain.)
    I’ve used eucalyptus oil to get dried milo out of the carpet many times! (cold milk and milo from hubby – although it wasn’t always him who spilled it, sometimes it was my then 18 month old daughter!)

    I love the tips in the article too!
    My 18 month old drew on the walls of our old house – pen and permanent marker – which I got mostly off. But when we put the house on the market to sell, hubby and his cousin took the last option – repaying the house!!

    My eldest daughter (the same one who at 18 months helped spill milo multiple times and drew on the walls) is now 5 and playing soccer. Will have to remember the grass stain removal one!

    PS we now keep all pens, textas, etc well out of reach of little people! (Miss 5 now has a little sister – miss 3 – and little brother – master 6 months! Learned our lesson with those! Especially as we’re renting now and repainting the house isn’t really an option!

  153. Avatar of Sarah Sabatino
    Sarah Sabatino Reply

    Best tip is when you need to find out how to remove something specific – look it up on the internet pronto- don’t make it worse by acting before researching!

  154. Avatar of Julia L Mills
    Julia L Mills Reply

    For wax stains use brown paper laid down first and a warm iron. The paper will soak up the wax keep repeating until no more wax is prevalent on the paper.

  155. Avatar of Deb Lee

    To freshen up floorboard scratches, rub some Vaseline over them & they disappear!

  156. Avatar of Nadah Horkos
    Nadah Horkos Reply

    If your saucepan or pot is burnt on the inside and you have scrubbed it and with no luck still there. Get toothpaste and smudge it on and scrub with a heavy duty scrubber. It will clean and polish back to new.

  157. Avatar of Blossom

    Talcum Powder is an alternative product if you don’t have any cornflour.
    An altrernative for burnt saucepans, stockpots etc is to stew rhubarb in it. My Auntie often used it.

  158. Avatar of Thals

    I always keep club sodaon hand in the pantry so if a mishap happens during mealtime I get on top of it straight away 🙂

  159. Avatar of Cindy Nickels
    Cindy Nickels Reply

    Most spills (including coffee) on the carpet can be treated immeadiately with boiling water and blot with hand towel. Works a treat, and no need to mix messy chemicals.

  160. Avatar of Cynthia Fisher
    Cynthia Fisher Reply

    Those annoying sticky labels on everything!! ..eucalyptus oil.

  161. Avatar of Natina

    My first go to when there is a stain is to soak the item in White Vinegar, has worked great every time.

  162. Avatar of Janet Molloy
    Janet Molloy Reply

    To remove pen marks from a sheepskin jacket, I used an alcohol swab. No risk of saturating and because the jacket couldn’t be washed – found this was the best method. It worked wonderfully well.

  163. Avatar of NotaDick

    Always keep a bucket of soaker in the laundry to put white and baby clothes in straight away for a soaking, changing regularly when you take clothes out to wash. Soak any clothes with mould on the for three days making sure to scrub a wet paste of nappy San on the clothes with each individual soak

  164. Avatar of Kelly Kilo
    Kelly Kilo Reply

    1. Open back door
    2. Pick up offending children/pets
    3. Deposit offending children/pets outside
    4. Close the back door
    5. Place coffee table over stain in rug
    6. Return to lounge to watch Game of Thrones

  165. Avatar of angelina.k
    angelina.k Reply

    Pen on fabric sofa (kids love it better than paper for some reason) i use vinegar and baking soda & circular motion with cloth/ clean sponge.

  166. Avatar of Katie Henderer
    Katie Henderer Reply

    My favourite for getting off sticky substances and removing crayon from walls is orange oil. Breaks down sticky and leaves a great smell in the air. Just wipe over with a damp cloth afterwards.

  167. Avatar of Claire H Simmons
    Claire H Simmons Reply

    my kids think that crayons equals masterpieces on the walls in the kitchen, rubbing white bread over the stains will help get them off

  168. Avatar of Bronwyn Elmes
    Bronwyn Elmes Reply

    Baby wipes clean everything. They remove felt tip pen from fabric, they dust the home and car. They clean kids. They are a cheap invaluable item that a keep at least one packet wherever I go.

  169. Avatar of ElkeH

    A few amazing natural remedies for various stains are: Bicarb, vinegar, eucalyptus oil & orange oil! No need for nasty chemicals at all 🙂

  170. Avatar of Sharyn W

    got perspiration stains or odor on your clothes – then rub a past of baking soda into the area before washing (if stains are bad leave the paste to remain on their for a couple of hours before washing.

  171. Avatar of Lorna M

    I use lemon juice and bicarb for most of the stains, it seems to work!

  172. Avatar of Laura Higgins
    Laura Higgins Reply

    Remove pen marks with nail polish remover.
    Permanent marker on whiteboard – go over with whiteboard marker and wipe off immediately.
    Waterstains on stainless steel or dark stone bench – use “magic eraser” type of melamine sponge.

  173. Avatar of Adele Smith
    Adele Smith Reply

    Dishwashing liquid is the best for the removal of cooking oil from clothing. It is made for the removal of grease etc from dishes and works wonderfully in the same way on your clothes. I hate it when oil splatters!

  174. Avatar of michelle brown
    michelle brown Reply

    Remove blood, red wine, coffee from carpets – wet stain then mound with salt or bicarb, allow to dry then vacuum, repeat if necessary

  175. Avatar of Cassy26

    For play-doh in carpet ; Don’t use hot water or any detergents etc. Wait until completely dry and then brush with a stiff bristled brush and vacuum.

  176. Avatar of Kerry

    Clean the spill immediately, saves a lot of heartache and money trying to fix it later.

  177. Avatar of Kirstin Trehan
    Kirstin Trehan Reply

    I love nappy san for soaking whites and any of my toddlers clothes

  178. Avatar of Elisabeth Martins
    Elisabeth Martins Reply

    Bleach of course is the best however if it needs to be used on colours go with the good ol’ wife’s trick of bi-carb soda, it’s natural, cheap and works wonders on everything.

  179. Avatar of JB

    Paste of bicarb and water, leave it for a while then spray with vinegar, then clean off with water after it’s bubbled.

  180. Avatar of Joanne Parkinson
    Joanne Parkinson Reply

    dry shampoo spray it your stain leave it for 10 minutes and vacuum off cleans most marks

  181. Avatar of Ern

    Prevention being better than cure. Waterproof spray all fabric furniture prior to use.

  182. Avatar of Di

    The tip my late Nan shared with me, to use a cheap, generic brand of all purpose cleaner (spray and wipe type product) as a pre-wash stain remover on clothing. Works a treat.

  183. Avatar of Shu-Ching Chang
    Shu-Ching Chang Reply

    My stain removal tip is homemade spray (bicarbonate , white vinegar and lemon juice ). It needs take several times to remove stains but it is Eco- Friendly homemade product and chemical free.

  184. Avatar of SUSAN

    I clean raspberry lemonade spills with a hot mop dipped in dish detergent and eucalyptus oil, wrung out then mop and repeat the method, I have found this invaluable as my husband was continually dropping these drinks and this was the only way to keep the carpet clean.

  185. Avatar of Michelle Green
    Michelle Green Reply

    Baking soda, vinegar and an old toothbrush is a godsend for removing stains from carpet and rugs.

  186. Avatar of Chrissy07

    I always go to Google and hope there is a solution on the Net.

  187. Avatar of Sandra Mills
    Sandra Mills Reply

    White vinegar/water and paper towelling, removes odours too.

  188. Avatar of Sam Minshull
    Sam Minshull Reply

    Tree sap on the kids pants from climbing trees? Sponge the sap on the clothing with antibacterial hand gel or vodka if you have some on hand… works a treat everytime!

  189. Avatar of Valerie Wee
    Valerie Wee Reply

    Baking soda and vinegar. Use some lavender oil to make it smells nice!

  190. Avatar of Helen

    Baby Wipes get lots of different stains out, but is especially good for food and drinks.

  191. Avatar of lisa

    My last stain ended up with carpet being replaced through insurance. Don’t let tradies work near your brand new carpet that suddenly became discontinued!
    Eucalyptus oil is good for blu-tac, or my favourite idea is if i can’t remove it first go just cover the stain with a rug (or furniture) – it’s removed instantly from my sight then.

  192. Avatar of Shu-Ching Chang
    Shu-Ching Chang Reply

    Remove stains as soon as possible is my mum’s tip to remove all stains.

  193. Avatar of Christie Louise
    Christie Louise Reply

    Bubble gum on clothing- just pop the clothing/item with the bubble gum/chewing gum in a bag with gum exposed (not folded in) in the freezer. Wait a couple of hours and the gum will be frozen, and will peel straight off!!!
    How gorgeous were those rugs by the way!!!!

  194. Avatar of Tamara Lamb
    Tamara Lamb Reply

    To remove calcium build up in your kettle add 2 tablespoons citric acid, 1 litre vinegar then top with cold water. Leave overnight and rinse well. Sparkling kettle will be ready to go!

  195. Avatar of Jacky Burkett
    Jacky Burkett Reply

    White wine to be poured ASAP on red wine stains, works wonderfully but try not to waste a quality white wine this way:)

  196. Avatar of Kim

    Always carry baby bums wipes with you. They get so many stains out (god knows what they do to bubs botts) and if you have them on you, you’re always armed to removed most stains

  197. Avatar of Carmel Corry

    I keep white vinegar and water in a spray bottle. It’s perfect for fast cleanups. Pat stain with paper towel, spray stain lightly, then pat again with fresh paper towel. Quick, cheap and easy

  198. Avatar of Pauline Olsen
    Pauline Olsen Reply

    To remove a spill from carpet, cover with layers of paper towel and stand on them! This will absorb as much moisture as possible. Then Google for the appropriate stain removal method!

  199. Avatar of Lili Harley
    Lili Harley Reply

    Pet pee from a rug, I soak up the urine with paper towels, spray with a 50/50 mixture of vinegar and water until soaked. Let it dry, then pour bicarbonate soda, leave for a half hour then vacuum.

  200. Avatar of Shu-Ching Chang
    Shu-Ching Chang Reply

    The best way to avoid stains is chosen easy cleaning carpets from Carpet Court and removing stains as soon as possible.Mum Central website has great tips to remove stains. I love it.

  201. Avatar of Garreth Jones
    Garreth Jones Reply

    Baking Soda and White Vinegar will lift stains on kitchen benches, from stainless appliances, bathroom tiles and grout, toilets and almost any other hard surface you can think of.

  202. Avatar of Robyn Smithwick
    Robyn Smithwick Reply

    To remove old blood stains, rub over stains with raw lemon and squeeze as much juice as you can on them. Leave for about 1/2 an hour. Mix up a paste of vanish and water and spread over the stains. Leave for 15 minutes. Finally soak in warm water and detergent. Launder in the usual way. Bingo. When I TOOK the articles off the line no stains.

  203. Avatar of LilMiss Kibby
    LilMiss Kibby Reply

    napisan! it does more than just nappies..use as a paste and is great for a whole range or fabric/carpet stains

  204. Avatar of Nicole Brownlie
    Nicole Brownlie Reply

    Make sure your children are completely coated in bubble-wrap and kept in a cage 🙂

  205. Avatar of Shu-Ching Chang
    Shu-Ching Chang Reply

    U-Tube is my best friend, I always find tips from U-Tube.

  206. Avatar of Melanie

    For oily spot on clothes, I use hand dishwashing soap. A little drop on the stain before doing the laundry usually get rid of the it.

  207. Avatar of PJ Scott

    For removing coffee from carpet (there are always spills when kids run around) Baking soda and soda water – work in it gently with fingers, pat with damp cloth to withdraw the stain then pad dry.

  208. Avatar of Emma Foster
    Emma Foster Reply

    To clean wax off carpets, gently scratch as much off as you can, then place a sheet of baking paper over the remaining wax and melt with an iron. You can then soak up the melted wax with a cloth or paper towel.

  209. Avatar of Lauren Jane Thomas
    Lauren Jane Thomas Reply

    To remove fresh stains from clothes, spray with napi san, then soak in a sink with hot water for the night.

  210. Avatar of Sacha Pech
    Sacha Pech Reply

    Call me an avoider; but Mr 7 and Miss 5 would rather get around naked (in jocks/ knickers) hence avoiding 90% of washing/ stain removal required. For everything else I use a home made, natural concoction of Liquid Dish Detergent, Glycerin, and water.

  211. Avatar of Kate Adams
    Kate Adams Reply

    Tea tree oil anf eucalyptus oil on my kitchen. Newspaper and water on my streak free windows. Bicarb on my carpets an bed. Microfiber cloths on walls and doors. Stay natural all i do ✌

  212. Avatar of Christina Lungo
    Christina Lungo Reply

    Eucalyptus oil works a treat with trying to get rid of grime
    and fingerprints or marks on the wall and smells divine!

  213. Avatar of Catherne

    Using a Detergent Solution – One teaspoonful of gentle detergent for washing woollens, to half a 0.3 litre of warm water. Always work from the outside of the stain inward to avoid spreading and use a hairdryer to assist in drying the damp area.

  214. Avatar of Brianna

    For marker stains on clothes and certain teddies such as beanie kids soak them in Milk and put in the freezer for 24 hours.

  215. Avatar of Rosemarie

    Use the power of the sun! It will bleach out lots of marks, especially tomato based stains.

  216. Avatar of Theodora Polentas
    Theodora Polentas Reply

    Baking soda and white vinegar, and I always soak whites for a minimum of 9 hours with the addition of some nappisan

  217. Avatar of Gayle Vos

    For fat, oil or wax place a paper towel over the carpet and iron on warm setting, they should come up off the carpet and stick to the paper towel.

  218. Avatar of PJ Scott

    Red Wine. Salt and lots of it while it is still wet. Let the salt soak up the wine until it is just this side of damp, then vacuum. Then spray some carpet cleaning foam. Press with damp cloth, until stain has gone. Do not rub r scrub the carpet fibres. Brush out when dry.

  219. Avatar of billy

    My 3 little treasures love to play with slime,let me tell you green slime on cream carpet …not happy.Found that white vinegar works a treat only downfall makes the room smell like fish and chips

  220. Avatar of rene mckee
    rene mckee Reply

    Blot with paper towel to remove excess moisture before applying stain remover product

  221. Avatar of Shu-Ching Chang
    Shu-Ching Chang Reply

    Love homemade cleaning products and positive attitude are my tip for removing all mass . I am enjoying to read comments . I am happy and thank you.

  222. Avatar of Matt

    My stain removing tip is to use bicarbonate soda on carpet, let it soak in and vacuum up!

  223. Avatar of tanya clarke
    tanya clarke Reply

    Having kids, there are always accidents. For fizzy drink stains, I swear by a dishwashing liquid and water mixture to rid the stain. Soak up with paper towel and let dry. Use carpet shampoo if needed after dry.

  224. Avatar of Jess Billings
    Jess Billings Reply

    Has to be white vinegar.
    Cleans just above anything and just a little goes a long way..

  225. Avatar of Karen power
    Karen power Reply

    To remove permanent marker trace over with whiteboard marker

  226. Avatar of Chris

    For dog wee (yep, we had a dog with a weak bladder), my mum used to put a towel over it when it was wet, and stood on it, to draw up as much wetness as possible, then sprinkle corn flour over the stain to draw up the rest. Then vacuum it up when dry. No stains.

  227. Avatar of Georgia Edgar
    Georgia Edgar Reply

    Makeup can be removed in a pinch with some washing powder mixed with makeup remover!

  228. Avatar of Kim Miller
    Kim Miller Reply

    Bicarbonate soda and white vinegar are age old stain removal treatments that combined will do the trick at removing any stain.

  229. Avatar of Kerry9478

    Gumption is my product of choice. It is quick strong on products so make sure you dilute with plenty of water

  230. Avatar of Melissa Furmedge
    Melissa Furmedge Reply

    I love magic sponges, they have removed black marks of the walls, cleaned my stainless steal, removed grease off exhaust fan and make my kitchen shine

  231. Avatar of Angela Dennis
    Angela Dennis Reply

    If chewing gum gets tracked onto the carpet, cover with ice cubes in a sealed bag. Once hardened, scrape off with the back of a blunt knife

  232. Avatar of Kerri dahm
    Kerri dahm Reply

    When kids vomit on carpet put talc powder over to help soak up and then its easier to vaccum.or clean also helps mask the smell

  233. Avatar of Courtney

    Spray stains on rugs or carpet with White Vinegar. Place a towel over the top, put your iron onto the highest steam setting, then iron the stain right out.

  234. Avatar of Alicia Bardsley
    Alicia Bardsley Reply

    Use Milton tablets to remove stains and odours from non-metallic kitchen utensils. Perfect for removing scratch marks from Corningware as well.

  235. Avatar of Rebecca

    Toothpaste makes stainless steel sparkle. Removes all calcium and water stains

  236. Avatar of Shu-Ching Chang
    Shu-Ching Chang Reply

    Happy Mother’s Day everyone, your are amazing. Love these beautiful people’s ideas.

  237. Avatar of Carly Pegg
    Carly Pegg Reply

    Pouring table salt on a broken egg will make it solidify making it much easier to scrap up and wipe away

  238. Avatar of Renee. Chaumont
    Renee. Chaumont Reply

    Miracle Spray – Washing Soda Vinegar Eucalyptus oil and water – No nasty chemicals and works a treat on everything!

  239. Avatar of Vicky King
    Vicky King Reply

    Don’t forget your toothbrush – it’s perfect for getting into
    tricky corners & scrubbing any tough stain – do not re-use on your teeth!?

  240. Avatar of Jen

    A little sprinkle of bicarb and white vinegar gets out everything!!!! 🙂

  241. Avatar of Stacey

    Pat spill on carpet to soak up as much as possible. Make a paste wish washing powder and water. Put paste on spill and give light scrub. Clean off with a cloth and water. Repeat till clean as possible

  242. Avatar of Karen

    Use white towels, place one underneath if the stain is on a rug, blot rather than rub and repeat treatment rather than over-soaking.

  243. Avatar of Jenny

    On clothes I start with Sunlight soap and scrub, if that doesn’t work I move onto a paste made of Napisan and water.

  244. Avatar of Melly Legiman
    Melly Legiman Reply

    The artificial sweetener always helps in ‘blotting out’ oily, greasy stains on clothing by effectively absorbing and breaking down the oil, thereby making it easier to wash the stains off later!

  245. Avatar of Marilyn Richardson
    Marilyn Richardson Reply

    To remove makeup off fabric-makeup remover foam wash.

  246. Avatar of Claire van Ryn
    Claire van Ryn Reply

    Baby wipes are the BEST! I find they quickly remove a smear of who-knows-what that your beloved child has bestowed on your favourite top as you’re running out the door. Handy for more than just wiping bums!

  247. Avatar of Jamie

    A dash of lemon juice and a splash of lime juice with a tad of vodka, works a treat.

  248. Avatar of Kara Healey
    Kara Healey Reply

    Baby wipes work on just about everything! You’d be surprised what stains they will get out

  249. Avatar of Rachael Harney
    Rachael Harney Reply

    Eucalyptus Oil, Baby Wipes or Makeup Remover work great on a lot of things.

  250. Avatar of Elizabeth Kaminski
    Elizabeth Kaminski Reply

    Try to clean it up straight away before it sets … also baby wipes & windex fix a multitude of sins!!

  251. Avatar of tristan blackaby
    tristan blackaby Reply

    We have a suede lounge so whenever the kids leave marks I clean it with a baby wipe and then dry any watermarks with a towel, like new every time.

  252. Avatar of Nichole Mckee
    Nichole Mckee Reply

    Bi Carb and Vinegar for a foaming action stain remover, and it’s pretty cool to watch too like a little science experiment 😉

  253. Avatar of Kathie Holmes
    Kathie Holmes Reply

    Having grown up in an ethnic family I think their best stain removal tip still stands – cover all furniture in plastic, permanently!!!

  254. Avatar of Jennifer Troy
    Jennifer Troy Reply

    I love DIY solutions. Vinegar is always a winner. Add a but of salt and dab at the stain. For tougher stains use equal amounts of vinegar and cornstarch, let dry, then vacuum.

  255. Avatar of Simone

    If permanent marker is used where it’s not supposed to be used is Aerogard it will wipe off may need a little scrubbing if its been in place for a long time.

  256. Avatar of Joanna H

    With 2 kids playing with playdoh which drops on the carpet and is then happily trodden on as well as foods – such as avocado, I’m dealing with mess all day! I like to sprinkle some napisan on the stains, brush it in with a little water and wait an hour. I use either an old toothbrush or dustpan brush depending on the size of the stain. After the hour is up, vacuum for a clean, stain free carpet!

  257. Avatar of Kylie T

    I create and use a homemade carpet cleaner by mixing 3 tablespoons of white vinegar to 2 cups of water, a little salt and eucalyptus oil.

  258. Avatar of michelle

    Vinegar< i use it for so many things from cleaning stains off benches to putting in the dishwasher to freshen 🙂

  259. Avatar of Veronica

    Water, bit of white vinegar and some fabric softener, treat the spill as soon as possible.

  260. Avatar of Bec D'owney
    Bec D'owney Reply

    When wall scrapes look like a re-painting job, try cream cleaner first. Gets rid of most stains and scrapes with ease!

  261. Avatar of Chelsea

    Some really great tips here! Vinegar seems to fix everything in my house

  262. Avatar of Sarah

    Bicarb and vinegar works for everything!love it
    Also babywipes for quick stain cleanups

  263. Avatar of PJ Scott

    Tea or coffee spilt on carpet. This really works. Pour some beer over the stain and blot out. Easy.

  264. Avatar of Emily G

    I always use Napisan for clothes and Chux Magic Erasers for marks on walls.

  265. Avatar of sarah moss
    sarah moss Reply

    salt on stain as quick as possible to soak it up, brush away and clean with good carpet cleaner not rubbing just dabbing

  266. Avatar of Kellie_Bright
    Kellie_Bright Reply

    Don’t have kids! You’ll find that your home remains pristine, stain-free and clean for life! Then again…they are pretty fun to have around (kids, not stains)

  267. Avatar of Kylie Sneddon
    Kylie Sneddon Reply

    For clothing I make a paste out of napisan and water and put it on the stain and let it soak for 30 minutes and put it in the wash.

  268. Avatar of Carrie Courts
    Carrie Courts Reply

    My mum always says to wash bloodied clothes with warm water as cold shocks the fabric and blood turns to a permanent stain.

  269. Avatar of Lorraine Reid
    Lorraine Reid Reply

    By pure chance, I’ve recently discovered Soda Water as a great stain remover! As soon as you realise there is a spill, (coffee, coke etc), pour a small amount of soda water on the stain and rub with a dry cloth, works for me every time!

  270. Avatar of Shu-Ching Chang
    Shu-Ching Chang Reply

    I learned some new stains remove tips today. I think that the Mum Central is my best friend now.

  271. Avatar of Kate

    When you have a whole lot of laundry to soak, soak it in the bathtub with some Nappisan – it leaves the bathtub sparkling clean as well as the laundry!

  272. Avatar of Bella Ki

    Coconut oil, eucalyptus oil and corn starch does wonders! Coconut oil takes out most stains from tiles whereas eucalyptus oil takes out makeup stains and corn starch takes out most carpet stains!

  273. Avatar of SCOTT BRUNSKILL
    SCOTT BRUNSKILL Reply

    I recommend the Vanish products such as Napisan and Preen….they remove practically any stain….be it on clothing or carpet or wherever….it even works on those tough ground in stains

  274. Avatar of Ainslie McKernan
    Ainslie McKernan Reply

    I’m a huge fan of Napisan in the wash 🙂 Gets out most stains so easily!

  275. Avatar of Kristal Rix Fulloftricks
    Kristal Rix Fulloftricks Reply

    Sour milk on ink stains – leave the lumpy milk over the stain for 20-30 mins and then wash as normal. It’s some sort of sorcery.

  276. Avatar of Maddie

    Vinegar on a urine stain on the couch, (2 yo toddler) then bicarbonate soda on the stain overnight then vacuum up in the morning – good as new!

  277. Avatar of Belinda Bee
    Belinda Bee Reply

    Paper towel is your best friend when it comes to removing stains on a carpet or rug! Blot up as much of the spillage you can before it dries and then treat appropriately ♥

  278. Avatar of Maggie Westbrook
    Maggie Westbrook Reply

    White vinegar is the best. Ever tried it for cleaning out your iron? Use Diluted solution with water in the water part of the iron and push through with steam – so much calcium build up comes out. Quite amazing.

  279. Avatar of Eva Kiraly
    Eva Kiraly Reply

    I’ve used talc powder on blood stains before and it worked a treat, so stain to be seen!

  280. Avatar of Brigitte

    I get ink off my clothes using hairspray! It’s absolute genius 😀

  281. Avatar of Dianne Kitson
    Dianne Kitson Reply

    Never let a blood stain dry – cover it with liquid detergent and let sit for an hour or so before rinsing it under cold water until the stain eventually disappears.

  282. Avatar of Kristy Winters
    Kristy Winters Reply

    Vinegar and bicarbonate soda and hot water mixed removes stains from and cleans benches windows clothes curtains

  283. Avatar of Dani

    Good old fashioned soak & put it out in the sunshine! Works wonders for light stains on clothing & gets rid of stains on cloth nappies too!

  284. Avatar of Larissa Campbell
    Larissa Campbell Reply

    Never remove a stain by rubbing only dab the area that has been affected.

  285. Avatar of staceyshailer
    staceyshailer Reply

    For vomit I blanket the stain in bi-carb soda and leave it to dry. Soaks up all the mess, once dry it can be swept or vacuumed up, and no nasty smell left behind.

  286. Avatar of Jennifer B.
    Jennifer B. Reply

    A paste of Napisan worked into a spot stain works wonders and if not, the carpet manufacturer’s own product. Cavalier Bremworth’s is excellent.

  287. Avatar of rcheerful

    I dab vodka on red lipstick stains and what do you know it works wonders and all comes off!!

  288. Avatar of Natalie Stoute
    Natalie Stoute Reply

    Windex is my best friend when it comes to removing carpet stains (and no, I’m not Greek haha!). Liberally spray stain with windex until quite wet then rub stain gently with an old towel. Stain should transfer to the towel. Repeat with another clean towel. Next, spray with small amount of water and place clean towel over it. Pat/stand on towel until water absorbed. Done! You’re welcome 🙂

  289. Avatar of Tuan Nguyen
    Tuan Nguyen Reply

    The best way to remove ink stains in coloured clothing is to soak it up overnight in a milk bath. Clean it using the washing machine the next day and watch the ink instantly go away!

  290. Avatar of Stevie

    In order to remove stains from my carpet I always use the following three step process:
    1. Immediately blot up as much of the spill as possible
    2. Spray the stain with a cleaning agent
    3. Blot up the stain with a clean white cloth

  291. Avatar of Juanita Munro
    Juanita Munro Reply

    WE LOVE BETROOT SALADS.. But, It’s a mess when one gets away on the carpet!!
    My tip –
    First of all..
    Dab the stain with a dry cloth to remove any excess liquid.
    Soak a clean sponge in cold water & Hold it on the stain.
    Then blot with a dry cloth and repeat.
    For stubborn stains –
    Mix 2 tablespoons of dishwashing liquid with 2 cups of water and try the sponging and blotting technique.

  292. Avatar of Madelaine Howe
    Madelaine Howe Reply

    Removing urine from carpet (dog)
    Get a glass of water and pour over puddle.
    Get a thick towel and a really heavy book- place towel over puddle and pop heavy book on top.
    Urine and water is absorbed into towel which stops it from puddling on the underlay- also completely removes smell!

  293. Avatar of Allmaree

    Water and vinegar removes just about all stains and lift odor

  294. Avatar of Ellen Robbins
    Ellen Robbins Reply

    To brighten yellowed white… add a couple of cups of white vinegar in the load. I often put it into the fabric softener dispenser and on top of the clothes. Wash on the hottest setting the care labels allow and hang in the sun for a day to dry.

  295. Avatar of Farrah Wigg
    Farrah Wigg Reply

    For whites, soak and wash and then hang on the line, sunshine will make it disappear!

  296. Avatar of Shu-Ching Chang
    Shu-Ching Chang Reply

    Vinegar and bicarbonate are the best ingredients to remove most of stains and odour.

  297. Avatar of PJ Scott

    This one is for the toilet. Just empty a can of cola in to the bowl. Leave it for an hour then scrub with toilet brush. Flush. Sparkling bowl no harsh nasty chemicals! It’s enough to put your kids off drinking cola thoughi!

  298. Avatar of Theoni Versace
    Theoni Versace Reply

    Hairspray ink stains on clothes before washing and this will lift the stain out.

  299. Avatar of deevajo

    Spray the stain and then use the steamer nozzle on your coffee machine to erase the stain. It’s saved many treasured item of clothing.

  300. Avatar of melanie whittle
    melanie whittle Reply

    Add eucalyptus oil to your laundry load its a great stain remover and makes the washing smell great .

  301. Avatar of Kathy Smyth
    Kathy Smyth Reply

    For mould spots on clothes, make a paste of vanish gold and leave if for a few hours, then wash. It certainly works

  302. Avatar of sesbill

    Whatever the stain is treat it with whatever’s recommended as soon as the stain is noticed, the longer you leave it the more it sets.

  303. Avatar of Jessica Chan
    Jessica Chan Reply

    Use a toothbrush and baking soda water paste to remove stains from textiles, rugs, tile grout..the list goes on!

  304. Avatar of Sarah

    Plain yellow laundry soap and a toothbrush gets out lots of stains and its cheap and economical too

  305. Avatar of Andrew Glass
    Andrew Glass Reply

    Ink stains on clothing, Cheap hair spray, spray it on then chuck it in the washer. Couldn’t believe it worked.

  306. Avatar of Sharon Gock
    Sharon Gock Reply

    Methylated Spirits remove very stubborn stains like grass, ink, lipstick, wine, make up, berries and grass!

  307. Avatar of Ashlea Malycha
    Ashlea Malycha Reply

    Bicarb with vinegar and eucalyptus oil is great for removing stains. The eucalyptus oil also has antibacterial properties, so it’s great for clothes that have encountered vomit or poop explosions!

  308. Avatar of Kelly Arnold
    Kelly Arnold Reply

    White vinegar works a treat on diamonds! Soak your bling and rings for a solid 20 mins, then rinse – guaranteed top sparkle factor!

  309. Avatar of Skye Tiernan
    Skye Tiernan Reply

    My puppy did her business on my new Jute rug, understandably I was super worried about cleaning this type of rug. I hosed as much off then used a combination of warm soapy water followed with a paste made from baking soda and vinegar. After a gentle scrub the stains and smell was gone!

  310. Avatar of Julie Ford
    Julie Ford Reply

    I make a paste with napisan on the tuff tuff stains and leave it soak and this helps keeps the kids clothes clean and stain free.

  311. Avatar of belle

    Another fan of the vinegar and baking soda combo here! Cheap, easy and effective.

  312. Avatar of L Conroy

    Blot the stain while it is fresh – do not rub, especially not vigorously

  313. Avatar of Janelle Meares
    Janelle Meares Reply

    Baby Wipes. A necessity when you have kids no matter what age. They are great at removing stains from just about any surface.

  314. Avatar of David Clayton
    David Clayton Reply

    Warm water and a few drops of Eucalyptus oil, it works on fabric couches and carpet.

  315. Avatar of Cathy H

    Terribly embarrassed on first date,
    Spilt red wine, not looking great!
    Soda water however worked a treat,
    Applied with a damp cloth… SWEET!

  316. Avatar of austhome

    Hire one of those steam cleaner machines from a supermarket and do a wonderful job with it yourself.

  317. Avatar of Sarah's

    Bicarbsoda and vinegar made into a paste, great for tile grout, around the stove, spills and wipes clean easily.

  318. Avatar of Amelia

    Eucalyptus oil is amazing for removing glue residue or anything sticky. I also use it to get stains out of carpet, it’s amazing! And it smells great too!

  319. Avatar of Marianne Bakulic
    Marianne Bakulic Reply

    Recently, during brief stay in hospital; helped nurses clean up pen-ink stain, from fabric – using just pure water, and grit. What a hit!!!

  320. Avatar of Emma stewart
    Emma stewart Reply

    To get makeup or other hard stains off clothes without having to wash the whole thing-use a dab of dishwashing liquid and a bit of water and gently rub

  321. Avatar of Haidee Murnane
    Haidee Murnane Reply

    I have found that spray and wipe sprayed onto a stain and then scrubbed off can work magic on stubborn stains.

  322. Avatar of Aoife

    I like to use hairspray, because i always have a bottle hiding somewhere in the house and it really does work. If i find a stain now i just grab my hairspray, apply it to the stain, and wipe with a paper towel, and it is as good as new. Quick, simple and perfect for me

  323. Avatar of sharon

    For red wine stains in carpet dilute with soda water then soak up with an old towel.

  324. Avatar of Cara

    For oil, wine and sauces I use cheap shampoo diluted in water mixed with bicarbonate soda. Works great!

  325. Avatar of Louise

    Use apple cider vinegar for mold on walls. cleaning Vinegar and bicar down a smelly bathroom drain will get rid of soap build up and the smell.

  326. Avatar of Belinda Smith
    Belinda Smith Reply

    Spray & Wipe gets rid of most stains and smells, even on fabric and carpet.

  327. Avatar of Debbie

    I pour a liquid eucalyptus detergent on the stain then go over it with my carpet shampooer, works a treat. 🙂

  328. Avatar of Veka Kuswandi
    Veka Kuswandi Reply

    For old oil stain on cloth, I use detergen paste and put it on the oil circle. Leave it for a few hours and rinse with warm water. Repeat if still visible.

  329. Avatar of Sara Johnston
    Sara Johnston Reply

    My cleaning tip is polishing the vents of your air conditioner with car polish, buffing off then for years to come it’s so simple to wipe the grime from the plastic rather than scrubbing at it and having the grime soak into the plastic and dicolouring it.

  330. Avatar of Nicole Fuller
    Nicole Fuller Reply

    Very soiled white pants with chocolate smoothie – soaked in Nappisan white then washed. Stain came right out.

  331. Avatar of Megan Rohleder
    Megan Rohleder Reply

    With triplets, the best stain removal trip I have is baby wipes, bicarb spray, vinegar and patience!

  332. Avatar of Winksey

    My 2 year old always draw on my walls! The magic eraser block seems to do the trick without removing the paint.

  333. Avatar of Christine

    For wine spilt on carpet simply throw down a folded towel and stomp on it with your feet. The towel absorbs the spill and it magically disappears. We’ve used this with any spilt drink

  334. Avatar of Toni Pech

    For red wine stain on carpet pour white whine on it immediately. Sounds crazy but the bleach in the white will ensure you’re not left with red on carpet. then just pour salt on top to draw out he moisture.

  335. Avatar of Samara Cassidy
    Samara Cassidy Reply

    When doing my washing i always add a cap full of napisan with my washing powder. Hubby clothes are always covered in stains (the joys of being a farmer!) and his clothes alwasy come up clean

  336. Avatar of Shu-Ching Chang
    Shu-Ching Chang Reply

    I love to use steam machine cleaning stains but I need to check fabric care , just in case.

  337. Avatar of PJ Scott

    For Oil, Wax or Fat: just lay a paper towel over the carpet then iron on a warm setting. Watch as the oil, fat and wax are absorbed by the paper towel and lift off the carpet.

  338. Avatar of Keira Briggs
    Keira Briggs Reply

    For high gloss tiles use boiling hot water and white vinegar to prevent streaking and mop marks!

  339. Avatar of Robyn Smithwick
    Robyn Smithwick Reply

    I wish back up was around years ago! I have got an Enjo glove for the shower. That keeps my lovely white wavy tiles in pristine condition!

  340. Avatar of Rachel

    Until I had kids I never realised how amazing baby wipes are! They are my first option for all stains and 9 times out of 10 they work!

  341. Avatar of Helen Triscari
    Helen Triscari Reply

    Baby wipes! For everything walls, floors, couches and carpet. Add some spray and wipe for tougher stains. Or tea tree oil to get of the smell of wee.

  342. Avatar of Lisa Jene

    I love the fizz of bicarb soda and vinegar. It’s not only fun, it gets rid of everything from bath grime to terminal buildup on a car battery.

  343. Avatar of sprickel

    With an grease or oil stain in clothing, spray it with WD40 then scrub a bi-carb soda paste into it. Then put it straight into the wash. Not a sign of it again. Oil stains be gone.

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