✨ Unleash the true colors of your wardrobe!
The Pack of 2 Rit Dye Laundry Treatment Color Remover is designed to restore the original brilliance of your fabrics. Each pack contains 2 ounces of a powerful formula that works best on 100% cotton materials. Simply machine wash in cold water and tumble dry on low for optimal results. Compact and easy to use, this product is a must-have for anyone looking to refresh their clothing collection.
Compatible Material | Fabric |
Item Weight | 2 Ounces |
T**M
This works on laundry mistakes!!! It’s magical!
I was skeptical but IT WORKED!! Daughter washed a red item with all of her white clothes which ALL became pink. I followed the stove top directions and put the pink clothes inside the pot and almost instantaneously they turned back to white. It simply lifted the pink color right off. It was almost magical. I highly highly highly recommend this if you’ve made a similar mistake.Be sure to keep the windows open and have good ventilation as it has a strong smell.
S**E
Red sweater enemy defeated
This works perfectly, but it smells terrible so don't use it on a day you're going to have company over. Don't do the washing machine method, only stovetop works.
C**L
Best dye remover out there, don't bother with anything else
The media could not be loaded. Washed a brand-spankin'-new red blouse, and it got mixed in with the 'regular laundry' accidentally.I *usually* wash new clothes (reds especially) by themselves or with like colors, but I'd grown lazy and lulled into a false sense of security over the past couple of decades by some *remarkably* colorfast red clothing, and thus I wasn't as careful as I should have been.Well, you can guess what happened, and my two white blouses came out of the wash a pale shade of rose. Quite pretty, actually, and the excess dye from the red blouse had deposited perfectly evenly. Impressive when you think about it actually. One shirt was 100% polyester, and the other 100% cotton. They came out nearly the same shade. If you've ever dyed fabrics, you know how difficult that is to achieve on purpose. Figures it'd happen accidentally.The transferred dye was incredibly stubborn. It survived Carbona Color Run Color Remover, Oxyclean, and even bleach. If only the red had been so attached to it's original garment!Had to order the Rit Dye Remover on Amazon, because I live in a podunk nowhere town that has the most ridiculously limited selection of products. (If only I could write reviews of places I've lived... 0/10 would not recommend) Rit had been my first choice, but due to lack of availability, it became my last resort.I ended up using both boxes after being *not quite* satisfied with the brightness of my white blouses following the first treatment. (I gave them the old college try, I really did. They were white, but there was still just the tiniest hint of pink. Probably nobody would have noticed but me, but *I* knew and it was annoying me)After the second round you could use the shirts to signal passing aircraft in the event of being lost while hiking and needing to flag down your rescuers. They looked *better* than new.Don't bother with other dye removers. Just get Rit.
C**Y
Works GREAT for natural fabrics
I put this project off for a very long time because I thought it would be a major hassle given the stovetop directions but I was wrong. I used a giant pot, boiled the water and plopped in my linen shirt and a knit cap. The brown dye came out of both fabrics well before the twenty minute timeline was up. It made both fabrics a cream/bone-type color, not white, but it still worked better than expected. The only issue is that this product does not work well on synthetics at all. See the brown flower embroidery and stitching on the shirt? The whole top used to be that color.
K**
Not a fan…
I wasn’t impressed with the outcome, it had a yellow tinge to it after I had finished the process. It also smells so bad, do NOT do this inside of your home. I did this outside and you could smell it from 60 feet away… The chemicals are harmful as well, you never know what residual chemicals you may soak in after wearing the garment. Purchasing a new garment in the desired color would be much better.
I**I
Works!
Always have problems with white items turning pink and this product brings them back to white!
D**E
Amazing, Good, Awful, and Ineffective
Here is what it all boils down to: depending on the type of fabric and the type of dye, it will either work surprisingly well or completely destroy...or do nothing. ALWAYS do a test patch...but there's an except to that rule.I used the stove top method.My findings:-Works great for white cotton T-shirts and most white cotton. Got a red stain out of a new white band T-shirt and red color bleed on a white cotton towel.-For two years, I had two cotton garments that had a blue bleed (wear a lot of jeans). They'd been washed and dried and the color bleed was likely hard set. This made them white again after 2 years of blue. Could see the design again. This was a wow factor.-Problematic factor: two cotton garments, both with color, had different results. One was white with green dye, which did not change in color or bleed; white was restored. One was white with blue dye, and the blue dye was changed an awful brown. Same fabric, so be careful with dyes. Not all dyes are equal.-Here's the exception: I tossed in a white cotton garment that had blue color bleed. It immediately turned a SALMON PINK. However, I stuck with the instructions, and after the 20 minutes on the stove, it turned cream color. After a second treatment with an additional packet, it finally turned white. So those of you getting the salmon pink/orange might try another one or two treatments. If that fails, toss it. It's lost.-It had no effect on one garment that wasn't cotton. Still blue.-Ruined two Victoria's Secret bras, but this is likely because of the different fabric types, cheap dye, and cheap plastic. One was white with blue and purple (got blue bleed)-->it's now just yellow even after 3 treatments (but it was yellow after the first). Another was white with blue (white got blued)--it's now light yellow with blue after 3 treatments.-Another garment, it restored the white patches, but removed the red dye from the fabric behind it so it went from stark red to a light red starting to become pink. Be careful with colors. Might be better to dab any white areas and then wash, but not sure.-Smell is toxic, definitely ventilate. But it's not unbearable.IT CAN CAUSE PERMANENT EYE DAMAGE. I got a drop on my eyelid and then read the package. If you're clumsy or accident prone, just wear safety goggles for sure.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
3 days ago