Sheet + Towel Stripping How-To

3 Materials
$10
4 Hours
Easy

While home for Quarantine, I’ve seen a lot of people posting about “stripping” their towels and bedsheets and showing disgusting After photos of dirty water - I was intrigued! Stripping the linens is supposed to get rid of any kind of build-up on them (whether that’s laundry detergent, body oil/sweat, hard water mineral deposits, etc). So I decided to give it a try myself and share the easy process - and let me tell you, it was a disgusting and oddly satisfying Quarantine Project. | This post contains affiliate links |

This is at the beginning of the process.

Apparently one should consider stripping their linens when they aren’t as absorbent as they used to be, they look or feel dingy, or they start to smell musty.


Supplies: Everyone seems to be using more or less the same supplies, which are:




  • 1/4 cup  Borax Powder
  • 1/4 cup  washing soda (or 1/4 cup baking soda if you're in a pinch and don't have washing soda.. I used baking soda)
  • 1/2 cup laundry detergent


How-To: Fill a bath tub with hot water and dissolve the Borax, washing soda or baking soda, and laundry detergent in it. Next add your towels and sheets (make sure to only do similar colors together… in some cases it can cause some colors to run. We only have done our white and light colored linens so far.) Then leave them to soak for the next four or so hours, stirring occasionally.


You should see the water turn from clear to a gross yellowish-dirty color. Once the water cools, drain the tub and squeeze the water from the linens, rinsing them with some fresh water. Then put in the washing machine (with no detergent - your items will already have absorbed detergent and Borax and you want to rinse everything out, not add more soap at this point), and run through the “wash” cycle to rinse everything out thoroughly.


After that you can put them in the dryer, or re-run the washing machine with detergent like you normally would to give them a fresh wash before drying.

Draining the dirty water. Ew.

Our Personal Results: So it wasn’t the magical night-and-day change across the board that I was expecting, visually anyways - and some items definitely had better results than others. OVERALL - Our linens definitely felt cleaner, and looked a little brighter - however, our old white towels (which have turned very off-white over the years), did not magically turn luminous white again like I was hoping. But again, that’s probably too much to expect as they are 10+ years old and have had many years to get discolored in the regular laundry. Nevertheless, just SEEING the dirty water after we stripped the linens makes me feel a lot better about doing this process - visually not everything looks perfectly white again, but I KNOW it’s cleaner after removing all that invisible gunk and that makes me feel a lot better.

After - I know they're cleaner now!

It’s my understanding that you can repeat this process as needed, and I can see myself doing this maybe up to 2-4x per year going forward to try to keep build-up at bay.


Disclaimer: Try at your own risk. In some cases this process may make colored fabrics run and may not be suitable for all fabrics.



Want to see another satisfyingly gross example...?

After my sister did her sheets - wow!

{ Follow on Instagram: @birchlandinghome }

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Sarah | Birch Landing Home
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  2 questions
  • Mishell Mishell on Jun 18, 2020

    Can you do the soaking in the washing machine?

  • Jennifer Roysdon Jennifer Roysdon on Jul 03, 2020

    Does this give a different result than the sanitize option on some washers? We have 5 dogs, so I sanitize with every towel load. But I'm really curious about this!!

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  • Marlo Jacobs Marlo Jacobs on Jul 12, 2020

    Excellent post with helpful tips. I started a similar process for my kitchen towels as they’ve been getting a lot of dish soap residue. I tend to only buy white towels for everyday use in the kitchen so I can bleach them when needed to disinfect them as needed. I fill the washing machine with hot water, 1 cup of vinegar &add the dish towels and let them agitate for a minute and soak them for an hour and then finish the wash cycle then I refill the machine with hot water and add a cup of baking soda and again let the towels sit for an hour and then finish the cycle. While the water isn’t gross you can see the soap residue in the water as it’s cloudy but not the brownish murky color. I’m going to try your method on some of my linens as well as my holiday table linens that have been sitting for a while. Thanks for sharing!

  • Lisa West Lisa West on Jul 13, 2020

    Wow I didn't know. I just bleach every thing. Except my burgundy towels. They just get washed with hot water and oxyclean. The trick with oxyclean is very hot water. If your tap water isn't hot. Boil water. It works great in dog pee stains. Cat stains takes a little longer use dawn dish soap with it to as it breaks down the oils. If that doesn't work skunk out works.

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