Cleaning.Tips.Net Welcome toCleaning.Tips.Net

Helpful Links

Cleaning Home
Tips.Net Home

Ask a Question
Make a Comment

Beauty Tips
Cleaning Tips
Home Tips
Legal Tips

Newest Tips

Using a Sleeve Board When Ironing

How to Remove Silly Putty from Blankets

How to Remove Silly Putty from Carpet

Removing the Sour Smell from Wet Carpet

Cleaning Your Freezer

Cleaning Plasma TV Screens

Cleaning LCD Screens

 

 

Cleaning Children's White Socks

Summary: White socks get dirty—there's no getting around it. You can however prevent the dingy look from happening by following these few simple measures.

I remember when I was little and I would frequently go around the house and outside with just my socks on. As with almost all little children, their socks get dirty and grungy and grubby. It's just a part of being six, but that doesn't necessarily make the mom's laundry job any easier. Especially with white socks, it's hard to get them as clean as you'd like or need and your kids will just muddy them up again anyway. So how do you get them back to white? Is it even possible? The answer to the latter is yes! It is possible to return your children's socks back to white and it's not too hard.

You know that hydrogen peroxide you keep on hand for cleaning out scrapes and cuts from the playground? You can use that same hydrogen peroxide to whiten and bleach your children's white socks. Before washing them, combine one cup of hydrogen peroxide with about a gallon of water and soak the socks in it before washing. You can then go ahead and wash the socks as normal. Hydrogen peroxide, properly diluted, is a very gentle bleach and will not harm the fabric of the socks.

Another tip to keep in mind as you wash those white children's socks is to wash them when they're dirty, and I mean to wash them as soon as you can. If you allow those dirt stains to set in then you'll have a much harder time getting the grungy look out, but if you make sure your children actually put their dirty white socks in the hamper, then you can wash them soon and do more to actively prevent the dinginess of white socks. Wash those white socks in hot water and use a bleach detergent. The more you can safely bleach your kids' white socks the better.

Another thing to keep in mind is that yes, white socks do become dingy and you can't necessarily prevent that look from ever coming on. All of these tips are for prolonging the life of white socks, but with socks in general (and especially white socks), they wear out and lose their original color and quality just because of sheer use and washings. So don't be discouraged when the day comes when you'll have to throw some of those socks out. It's okay!

Preventing the dingy look on your socks is possible and easy. With just a little extra step, you can succeed in preserving the whiteness and quality of those socks just a little longer. Just because your children run outside and inside and dirty up those white socks, doesn't mean those socks can't be cleaned!

Related Tips:

Eliminate the Clutter; Make Your Bedroom a Refuge! Is your bedroom a cluttered mess, or is it a place where you can comfortably escape from the outside world? Clean up that mess and get organized, and you'll find that your bedroom can be a refuge from the world. Check out Top Ten Tips for Cleaning and Organizing Your Bedroom today!

 
 

Comments for this tip:

Amiraquel    29 Dec 2008, 09:49
I had to do away with my kids white socks since the only way i knew how to clean them was hand washing them with chlorine bleach.Thanks for the god advice.
trish    12 Nov 2008, 17:33
I've been having this problem a lot lately with my own socks. I make my own detergent and thought that might be the problem. I tried everything to get them white again (except the peroxide) and it seemed strange that mine were the only socks in the family that did this. Was it the fabric? My socks seem to have some nylon/stretch to them. Was it the detergent? It has whitener in it. What?

I finally resigned myself to buying new socks. After doing the first load of whites, I noticed that only two socks, out of all of my socks in that load turned gray-brown and dingy. All the rest were perfect white. I have finally realized the problem, the ones that turn gray are the ones I put on after slathering lotion on my feet before bed. I will be careful not to use my good socks at that time and will try the peroxide on the already dingy ones.

Leave your own comment:

*Name:
Email:
  Notify me about new comments for this tip
Hide my email address
*Text:
*What is 2+3? (To prevent automated submissions and spam.)