Wax is a form of olefin which can be easily removed with lighter fluid or mineral spirits or kerosine or turpentine or similar fluids. After treating your garment with one of these, wash it with ordinary laundry detergent, probably twice, and it will be good as new! Or, you could just get it dry cleaned, which would work just as well.
2006-07-13 15:01:04
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answer #1
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answered by Sciencenut 7
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You may be out of luck because of the colors of the wax / pants. But try putting the pants on an ironing board, atop the stain put a folded-in-half paper towel, and iron over the paper towel. The wax will soak into the paper towel. Keep moving the towel so you're ironing over clean paper towel until the wax is totally been melted into the towel. I dunno, maybe you'll have to put paper towel under the wax too, depending on how deep the wax goes. Good luck though anyway.
2006-07-13 14:54:22
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Put a paper towel over the stain. Take an iron and iron over the paper towel. This heats up the wax, turning it to liquid and it can be dabbed up with the paper towel. Repeat this procedure with a clean paper towel as many times as necessary for the stain to go away. This should work. I've done it.
Good Luck!
2006-07-13 14:54:42
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answer #3
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answered by Just a Girl 3
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Dowlinggram is definitely maximum proper. no longer something will take yellow armpit stains away! they're diverse than wine or blood or espresso stains. i have tried for years until eventually I examine a tip that it became the aluminum in antiperspirant. I used to attempt each and every skill and variety of antiperspirant i ought to locate, even if spray, roll on or gel on the cabinets and kept "sweating" and getting the stains. Oxyclean, bleach, blue stuff, red stuff, stuff on television, stuff at Walmart, no longer something worked. change to deodorant in basic terms, no longer antiperspirant. you'll sweat a lot less, and not in any respect extra stains. (i recognize, seems the option of what you'll imagine, i have been there) verify the elements on inspite of deodorant you purchase, and ascertain it isn't antiperspirant or containing aluminum. the information I examine many years in the past reported the aluminum in antiperspirants react with the detergent to create those stains as you wash. this is no longer your sweat doing it. yet, it should be reacting inclusive of your sweat, who's acquainted with for certain. both way, I made the skeptical change and function been a deodorant-in basic terms guy for 7 years now. And oddly sufficient I surely have a lot less soaked pits than ever formerly.
2016-10-14 10:52:47
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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probably not gonna get it out since you washed and dried it. more then likely it is set in. however, if you did not already wash and machine dry it ...try this...place a brown paper bag over the stain. using a hot as possible iron (dry setting only) apply the iron to the bag that is on the stain. you should see it lift off and absorb into the bag. keep moving the bag as it shows absorbing of the wax on the bag. use only a brown paper bag. all the others have a coat of wax on them including the white.
2006-07-13 15:01:28
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answer #5
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answered by whimster 2
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use u iron put a wash rag or a piece of cloth over the spot use the steam i wouldn't put the iron directly on the pants but on the cloth this should help i spilled a very large candle an my floor what a mess i first used a blow dryer that made it soft then i scratched it with a knife, it got out some but an iron and a lg piece of cloth made a big differences i hope this or someone Else's hint helps
2006-07-13 15:01:17
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answer #6
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answered by meemeemee40 5
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When I worked at a motel and a lady spilt candel wax on the carpet we put a towel over it then ironed the spot and it pulled the wax out of the carpet into the towel. Im not sure how well it will work on clothing so you might try this if nothing else works.
2006-07-13 14:57:10
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answer #7
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answered by janell b 2
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ok.. my forte! .. stain removal.
I would dab it with am ice cube and try to pick off the hard bits.
Ironing it would only cause the wax to bleed into the fabric.
After you have picked off the hard bits i would use a mild hand soap and work it into the stain. Soak it and rinse in hot water.
wash the pants the next day as normal.
2006-07-13 14:59:44
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answer #8
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answered by punkystyledwildchild 1
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This is the same technique I have taught over 138,000 men and women in 157 countries to successfully treat their excessive sweating condition over the past 7 years!
Remember: Watch the whole video, as the ending will pleasantly surprise you�
2016-05-19 22:38:31
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Dampen a towel and place it over the wax then iron the area and repeat until it has all transferred to the towel.
2006-07-13 14:55:07
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answer #10
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answered by geotom 3
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