about hafe of the cap. if small 3/4
you can put bleach on them before you put them in the washer. just let them soak in the bleach
No, alcohol does not bleach clothes.
It is recommended to add bleach to white clothes during the washing machine's bleach dispenser or during the rinse cycle. Be sure to follow the instructions on the bleach bottle for the correct dilution and timing to avoid damaging the fabric.
Bleach is used to get stains of of white clothes and mostly towels. But if you put colored clothes ad towels in the wash with bleach it can make white spots on them. (Trust me. I have experienced that!) Please feel free to improve my answer everyone!
No, It Does Not. If You Add To Much Bleach It May Permanently Damage The Clothing, Though.
To bleach clothes, first check the care label to ensure the fabric can withstand bleach. Then dilute the bleach in water following the instructions on the bleach packaging. Soak the clothes in the bleach solution for the recommended time, then rinse thoroughly and wash as usual.
To make cloths white, bleach them. #2 answ: actually, bleach makes clothes kind of a yellowish color, but outside of painting them, it's your best bet. With bleach, you also have to be careful of burning the clothes. Too much bleach can tend to burn or disintegrate them chemically.
Bleach rinses out of clothing and what you have left is the absence of color in the clothing that you put bleach on. The only way to remove the spots with no color is to redye the item.
Dont get bleach on your clothes!
Carefully follow the directions on the bottle of bleach. Too much bleach can actually burn holes in your clothes. With anything white, you need to remember that white is a color. This is important because fabric starts out as a gray color before it is dyed. If your whites are looking a little gray, it is because you have bleached or simply washed out the color of white over time! No amount of bleach is going to make a garment white if the color has been bleached or washed out!
No, isopropyl alcohol does not bleach clothes. It is commonly used as a disinfectant or cleaning agent, but it does not have bleaching properties like chlorine bleach.
To bleach colored clothes without damaging them, use oxygen-based bleach instead of chlorine bleach. Always follow the instructions on the bleach product, and conduct a patch test on an inconspicuous area of the garment first. Wash the clothes in cold water to prevent the bleach from fading the color.