The kits in the store don't really clean things. The dirt has nowhere to go in a bag in your dryer. In real drycleaning, a liquid solvent is used, and the dirt is rinsed out into the solvent, and away from the fabric (as it is in washing).
Yes.
The P refers to the petroleum-based solvent, Perchloroethyline, being preferred for that fabric. "Perc" (as cleaners call it) is one of the most commonly used drycleaning solvents in the USA
drycleaning
send it for drycleaning
Remove Varnish by following these steps:Sponge with Drycleaning Solvent.Sponge with Dry Spotter.Keep stain moist and blot occasionally with Absorbent Material.Continue as long as stain is being removed.Flush with Drycleaning Solvent.Repeat above steps until no more stain is removed.Allow to dry completely.Apply Amyl Acetate to stain and cover with Absorbent Material dampened with Amyl Acetate.For 15 minutes,Keep stain moist and blot occasionally with Absorbent Material.Sponge.When not working on stain, cover with an inverted bowl to minimize evaporation.Flush with Drycleaning Solvent.See related link for more specifics
Get one of those flush kits from an auto parts store.
1. used for energy (transportation, electricity) etc. 2. Drycleaning.
There are products and kits for this at most national chain auto parts stores.
Yes, a nursing doe may eject dead kits from the nest. This behavior is instinctual as it helps maintain the health and hygiene of the nest, preventing the spread of disease among the remaining healthy kits. The doe often recognizes the dead kits through scent and may remove them to focus her resources on the surviving offspring.
Ronald Paul Willett has written: 'Laundry and drycleaning: coin-operated and nonautomatic'
free mail, nice salary, generous travel allowance, free everyday services (flowers, drycleaning, etc)
There are products and kits available at autoparts stores and online. I prefer Glassylite.