How can I get spider poop out of cotton fabric?

Similar questions: spider poop cotton fabric.

Washing in hot water is the only solution I know of You have to treat them like you would an allergen. Because of the size of the droppings, they can be kind of hard to get it out, so it may be necessary to repeat wash in hot water more than once. Any good detergent should do.

Here's a quick article on the effectiveness of getting allergens out of cotton:May 21, 2007 -- Hotter is better when it comes to killing dust mites and other allergens in your laundry. A new study shows washing laundry in hot water (140 degrees Fahrenheit) kills 100% of dust mites. But turn the dial down just 36 degrees to a warm, 104 degree Fahrenheit wash and only 6.5% of dust mites are killed in the laundry.

Hotter water was also better at removing dog dander and pollen. But if your delicate laundry can’t take the heat, researchers also suggest another way to reduce dust mites and allergens in the laundry: wash at a lower temperature (between 86-104 degrees Fahrenheit) and then rinse the laundry twice with cold water for at least three minutes each. Killing Allergens in the LaundryIn the study, presented at the American Thoracic Society’s 103rd International Conference in San Francisco, researchers compared the effectiveness of washing cotton sheets with regular laundry detergent at various temperatures in removing dust mites, dog dander, and pollen allergens.

The results showed that washing laundry at hotter temperatures was significantly more effective than warm water at killing dust mites as well as other allergens. For example: * Washing laundry in warm, 86- to 104-degree Fahrenheit water killed only about 6% of dust mites. * Hot water washing (at 140 degrees Fahrenheit) killed 100% of dust mites.

* Washing in hot water also removed nearly 90% of dog dander compared with about 60% removed in warm water washing. * Hot water washing removed nearly 97% of pollen in the laundry compared with 69% at 86 degrees Fahrenheit and 95% at 104 degrees Fahrenheit. The study also showed that steam cleaning of the sheets was equally effective as hot water (140 degrees Fahrenheit) washing at killing dust mites and removing dog dander and pollen.In addition, researcher Jung-Won Park, MD, PhD, of Yonsei University in Seoul, South Korea, and colleagues found rinsing laundry twice in cold water was also effective at removing all traces of dog dander in laundry washed at any temperatures.

http://www.webmd.com/allergies/news/20070521/hot-water-removes-allergens-bestGood luck! Sources: http://www.webmd.com/allergies/news/20070521/hot-water-removes-allergens-best .

I have a firm belief in hydrogen peroxide! I don't recall that I've ever seen spider poop, but if I HAD I know I'd use hydrogen peroxide to get it out of cotton fabric. I've learned to use this in place of bleach or any other spot, fungus or other type of cleaning agent in my laundry.It works absolutely beautifully.

Please try it. Put one full cup in your washload (along with your normal amount of laundry soap), and see how it works. Get rid of the spider poop!

(P.S. I get scratched by my cat occasionally and have had the darndest time getting blood out of my blouses or jeans. Hydrogen peroxide put on the blood stain right before I toss it in the wash is the best thing I've ever seen.NO blood stains any more! It's so great.

)Good luck! Sources: My opinion .

2 ROFL, Autumn! That was exactly what I was thinking! :-) .

ROFL, Autumn! That was exactly what I was thinking! :-).

3 lol, me too. And how do you know it's spiders? .

Lol, me too. And how do you know it's spiders?

My baby is 5 months old, he poop well everyday but now he doesn't poop since thursday, Is he getting trable getting poop.

I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

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