How to Remove Sticky Labels from New Clothing
How to Remove Sticky Labels from New Clothing (Quickly and
Easily!)
by LeAnn R. Ralph
I recently acquired three new pairs of jeans. This particular
brand (Field & Forest) came with a long label pasted down the
back of one leg.
I tried and tried to peel the label off, but all that happened
was small pieces of it broke off. The majority of the label
remained stubbornly stuck to the pants.
"I can't wear them that way!" I said to myself.
Then I remembered that non-aerosol hairspray removes ink from
clothing. It is not necessarily the hairspray that works, I
know, it's the alcohol. I keep a spray bottle of ordinary
rubbing alcohol in the bathroom to clean the faucets and the
toilet and my eyeglasses, and I wondered if the alcohol would
work on labels.
I retrieved the alcohol from the bathroom, sprayed the label on
one new pair of jeans, waited a minute or two, got a paring
knife out of the drawer in the kitchen -- and presto! The label
peeled off so quickly and easily, I could hardly believe it. The
alcohol dried in 10 minutes, and I was able to wear my new pair
of jeans.
To remove a sticky label that refuses to peel off a new piece of
clothing, try this:
1. Spray the label with ordinary rubbing alcohol, or, if you
don't have any rubbing alcohol, use non-aerosol hairspray.
2. Wait a minute or two.
3. Gently scrape the label off the clothing with a paring knife,
a butter knife or another straight edge, such as a credit card
or a ruler.
4. Wait 5 or 10 minutes for the alcohol to dry -- and you're on
your way!
************************************** copyright 2006: LeAnn R.
Ralph
LeAnn R. Ralph is the author of the books "Cream of the Crop
(More True Stories from Wisconsin Farm)" (trade paperback, Sept.
2005); "Christmas in Dairyland (True Stories from a Wisconsin
Farm" (trade paperback 2003); "Give Me a Home Where the Dairy
Cows Roam" (trade paperback 2004); "Preserve Your Family History
(A Step-by-Step Guide for Interviewing Family Members and
Writing Oral Histories" (e-book 2004). You are invited to read
sample chapters, order books and sign up for the free
newsletter, Rural Route 2 News -- http://ruralroute2.com