Whites can be washed with chlorine bleach. Follow the label directions. Light colors may return to normal after a few washes but there is not really much else you can do for them without ruining the original color.
Have you tried Vanish? The pink thing... It helped me many times!
just leave it alone
Don't put it in the dryer or iron it before treating the stain if it can be helped. Heat helps set the dye stain in further. If it is too late for that, no worries. You can still try to save it. RIT dye makes a dye remover. You add it to a sinkful of hot water and hand wash the stained item. When you are done, you throw it in the washer and it is usually fine. They make a separate remover for red dyes that have bled in the wash. I have used it before and it worked great for me. It was simple and there was no trace of the red dye stain left when I was done. I recall it ran somewhere around $2 or 3 US.
The dye in dark clothing comes out regardless of the presences of white clothing. When a dark item is dyed, the manufacturer sets the dye to make sure that it stays on the fabric, but some of the dye doesn't set. When this item is washed, some of that un-set dye may come off and redeposit itself on surrounding clothes. If the dye redeposits on a dark item, the dye will not be visible, but if the dye redeposits on a white item, the dye will change the color. It is generally not permanent, but sometimes the heat of the dryer can set the newly redeposited dye into clothes.
dye them black
Have you tried Vanish? The pink thing... It helped me many times!
just leave it alone
If the colors of your clothes bled in the washer, don't put them in the dryer. The dryer will set the dye into the clothes. Take the lightly colored items that were stained by the bleeding dye and put them back into the washer without detergent on a hot water cycle.
Don't put it in the dryer or iron it before treating the stain if it can be helped. Heat helps set the dye stain in further. If it is too late for that, no worries. You can still try to save it. RIT dye makes a dye remover. You add it to a sinkful of hot water and hand wash the stained item. When you are done, you throw it in the washer and it is usually fine. They make a separate remover for red dyes that have bled in the wash. I have used it before and it worked great for me. It was simple and there was no trace of the red dye stain left when I was done. I recall it ran somewhere around $2 or 3 US.
No, there is no way to remove color from poly cotton blends in order to dye another color. You can use two products called iDye and iDye Poly to change the color of your item of clothing.
How can I remove dye stain in the bath
The dye in dark clothing comes out regardless of the presences of white clothing. When a dark item is dyed, the manufacturer sets the dye to make sure that it stays on the fabric, but some of the dye doesn't set. When this item is washed, some of that un-set dye may come off and redeposit itself on surrounding clothes. If the dye redeposits on a dark item, the dye will not be visible, but if the dye redeposits on a white item, the dye will change the color. It is generally not permanent, but sometimes the heat of the dryer can set the newly redeposited dye into clothes.
dye them black
Bleach is used to remove color from textiles not to dye them. See related links.Bleach is used to remove color from textiles not to dye them. See related links.Bleach is used to remove color from textiles not to dye them. See related links.Bleach is used to remove color from textiles not to dye them. See related links.
No, a water filter will not remove the dye from red diesel.
bleach the red dye out.
Get on Pixie Hollow, go to Daisy's Dyes, buy a dye of your choice, choose how many you'd like of that color and your payment option (ingredients or diamonds), then close out of the dye shop part, and go to "dye items". Choose Wardrobe, then choose the item you want to dye, then choose the dye you want to dye it with, then pay for dying it with diamonds or ingredients, then your item is dyed.