Categorized Treatment and Professional Solutions for Garment Yellow Stains in Laundry Shops

Yellow stains are one of the stubborn stains that laundry shops frequently encounter in daily tasks. When facing yellow stains of different origins and properties, relying only on a single method or blindly using bleach is ineffective and may cause damage.

Identifying the type of yellow stain and using the correct treatment can improve stain removal. It can also help ensure the safety of clothes.

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Guide to Identifying Yellow Stain Type

Common yellow stains can be primarily analyzed in terms of three dimensions: location, touch, and color.

  • Location

– Collar, cuffs, underarms

They are mostly a mixture of sweat stains and sebum.

– Front chest, placket area

They are commonly oil stains or colored liquids (coffee and juice).

– Uniform yellowing of the entire garment

It is usually caused by oxidation during long-term storage.

– Spotted or flaky stains

These stains might be oil spots, or they could come from spilled drinks.

– With mold spots or powdery substances

It is a typical sign of mold stains, and is mostly caused by storage in humid environments.

  • Touch

– Stiffness

It may result from the combined effect of stubborn sweat stains and oxidation.

– Sticky feeling

It is typically oil-based stains.

– Removable powder when wiped

One of the characteristics of mold stains.

  • Color

– Yellow with reddish-brown tint

Common in oil pigments, protein oxidation stains (blood stains, milk stains), tannic acid oxidation stains, or rust stains.

– Light yellow with lemon-green tint

Mostly plant tannin pigments, such as grass stains, lemon stains, curry stains…

Categorized Treatment and Stain Removal Process Recommendations

Here is an important pre-treatment note. Regardless of the stain remover or method used, operators should always test it first on a hidden area of the garment to check for color fading or fabric damage.

  • Yellow stains with reddish-brown tint

– Oil pigment stains

First perform oil removal treatment, then use chlorine bleach or oxygen bleach for oxidative bleaching.

– Tannic acid oxidation stains

First treat with stain-removing acid, then apply oxidative bleaching (chlorine bleach/color-safe bleach).

– Protein oxidation stains (blood stains, milk stains)

It is recommended to first decompose with a protease preparation, then treat with stain-removing acid, and finally conduct oxidative bleaching.

  • Light yellow stains with lemon-green tint

They are mostly plant tannin pigments.

Treat with stain-removing acid → apply oxidative bleaching.

  • Precautions for common stain treatment

– Protein stains (sweat stains, milk stains…)

Do not use hot water, as it will cause protein coagulation and increase the difficulty of removal.

– Beverage stains (coffee, tea, fruit juice…)

First spot-treat with an alkaline emulsifier, then alternate treatment with stain-removing acid, and finally perform oxidative bleaching.

– Storage-induced yellow stains

These are stubborn stains; it is recommended to use an alternating treatment method with oxidizing agents and acidic reducing agents.

– Mold stains

It is recommended to first locally treat with a stain remover containing ethanol disinfectant, then wipe and follow with oxidative bleaching (oxygen bleach or chlorine bleach).

Operation Recommendations

– Timely Treatment

The newer the stain, the easier it is to remove.

– Testing First

Always do a small-scale test before any stain removal operation.

– Categorized Operation

Select appropriate treatment agents and methods based on different stain types. Avoid the overuse of bleach.

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Conclusion

Kingstar is always dedicated to providing professional technical support and advanced laundry solutions for the laundry industry. We hope that every laundry industry practitioner can use scientific, highly efficient, and safe methods to encounter all kinds of laundry problems, improve service quality, and customer satisfaction.

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