It would be best to throw it away. I am sure they probably do have some kind of clenser than can clean it, but would you really want to wrap yourself or anyone else up in a blanket that was soaked in a combustible liquid? Whatever you do, DO NOT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCE put it in the washer or dryer...especially the drier (it will blow up, and i am not kidding) and if you put it in your washer then it will ruin it (you will get gasoline on everything else you put in there from then on). If it is only going to be used for garage work, then I am fairly certain you can just hang it outside (avoid direct sunlight) and he gasoline will evaporate.
yes
Chemical
wash it, clean it, dry it
Wash garment in cold water and normal laundry detergent, let it sun-dry(this is important) with plenty of light on the spot, then wash normally and watch it disappear!
detergent ovbviously burns the small thin layer off your hands which alows them to get dry and since of that they get dry and burn stuff easily like a thin layer of skin which makes your skin dry it would well be good 4 gasoline since it burns well since gas is basically burned???? evaporated??? something like that show ummm i reallyu never heard of that do you think you mean achahol???
you dont you dont
Yes, but let them air out and dry first
The best way is to wash it by hand, and then air dry it by hand over a clothesline.
Dry corn is dry and soaked corn is wet.
You should follow the instructions on the car lable but if that is missing just rinse it by hand hand hang dry it. do not use until compleatly dry.
I have two. The tags say Wash Cold, No Bleach, Tumble Dry. I would hazard a guess that if you have a gas dryer, use the lowest setting. Mine seems to crisp fabric like this.
Check the washing instruction label. Some you can, others need to be dry-cleaned. If in doubt, take it to the cleaners.
wey blanket
You should do this in cold weather when the horse is wet, usually after a workout when the horse is soaked in sweat and is hot, he will catch a chill fast if you don't blanket with straw/hay. After sleigh rides in Northern Ontario our draft horses are soaked in hot sweat, even tho the horses are hot/warm they NEED their blankets until their hair is dry. We can't turn the horses outside soaked in sweat and we don't want to keep them in the barn so we put their blankets on and pack hay or straw (whichever is cheaper) under the blanket. We only keep the blankets on the horses until the horse's hair is dry. The straw/hay keeps the blanket from packing the horses hair down and helps air flow to dry the hairs, the blanket traps heat and provides a wind break. If you blanket without that hay/straw layer it will take longer to dry(causing very itchy skin) and pack the horses natural insulator/hair to the point where it can't do its job. That and in wet/damp freezing rain storms is the only time we blanket the horses and we never blanket without the straw/hay, the horses stay outside 24/7 with free access to hay & water and a good windbreak with roof, no need for blankets otherwise for our horses.
The cast of Soaked Dry - 2007 includes: Amanda Jameson Shaina Koval Woodrow Travers
the blanket has water and water is a very good conductor so a wet blanket is a better conductor than a dry blanket
If you wash it 3 times and tumble dry it 3 times and it still sheds, throw it out. These fibers are probably going to land in your lungs, and cause a real problem. For keeping the best quality of fleece blanket, please not use your fleece blanket of age over 5 years.