How to Remove Blood from Clothing

Removing blood stains from clothing can be tricky, but with the right techniques, you can often salvage the clothing item. The key is to act quickly while the stain is fresh using cool or cold water. With a little bit of effort, it is often possible to get blood stains entirely out of fabric.

Evaluate the Fabric

First, you’ll want to consider the type of fabric that has the blood stain on it. Certain fabrics are easier to remove stains from while some more delicate materials require special care.

Delicate Materials
For silks or wools, you’ll want to be very gentle as aggressive rubbing can damage fibers. Blot these fabrics instead of rubbing. Avoid hot water on these as well which can set in stains by cooking the proteins.

Sturdy Materials
Synthetics, denim, and cotton blends can typically handle a bit more vigorous cleaning efforts. You can soak and rub these fabrics more aggressively, but still avoid hot water.

Act Quickly with Cool Water

As soon as possible after the blood stain occurs, rinse the fabric under a stream of cool or cold water. This helps prevent the stain from setting in by diluting it. Gently dab and blot the stain while rinsing – do not aggressively rub it at this stage which can grind the blood deeper into the weave.

Be sure to rinse from the underside, so the stain is pushed out of the fabric rather than further embedded by the water pressure. Continue this blotting and rinsing process until the runoff water is clear.

Pre-Treat the Stain

For blood that has begun to dry, create a pre-treatment solution to help lift it before washing.

Water + Dish Soap: Add a few drops of clear dish soap like Dawn to cold water in a bowl or spray bottle. Let the fabric soak for 10-20 minutes. The soap helps break down fat and protein residues.

Enzyme Cleaners: Commercial enzyme cleaners like OxiClean also break down proteins in stains. Dilute it per instructions in cold water and soak the fabric before standard washing.

Wash with Cold Water

Once you’ve pre-treated the fabric, launder it in cold water using an enzyme-based detergent. Avoid using hot water which can cook the proteins into stains. Let it air dry, as high heat from a dryer can also set in stains.

You can repeat these cold water washing steps as needed if any residual staining remains. With synthetics and blends this is often successful for complete stain removal through repeated rinse cycles. More delicate materials may retain a slight hint of staining no matter what after such trauma.

Seek Professional Cleaning

For valuable and delicate fabrics that retain stains even after home treatment, take them for professional dry cleaning. Let them know what caused the staining. They have access to more powerful spot cleaners that can penetrate deep into fabric weaves. This gives the best chance for removing stubborn blood stains fully.

So in summary, when facing blood stained clothing:

  • Act quickly to rinse in cold water
  • Gently dab, don’t rub vigorously
  • Pre-treat with enzyme cleaners made for stains
  • Wash in cold water, air dry
  • Repeat as needed
  • If stains persist in delicates, seek professional cleaning

With the proper technique and products, even serious blood stains can often be successfully removed from fabric. A bit of prompt effort can save an expensive silk blouse or beloved blanket. Remain gentle with delicate materials and persistent on heartier fabrics, adjusting efforts based on weave and material.

Leave a Comment