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Carpet Cleaning tips: How to remove furniture compression marks in your carpets

Moved your furniture and now you have ugly marks on your carpet from where the coffee table and sofa had been?

You’ve vacuumed and tried to pick out the pock marks?

Or are you moving out and leaving a slew of potholes in the carpets?

Even if the carpet is sparkling clean, these unsightly indentations will catch the eye and give the room an overall sense of disorder and uncleanliness.

Easy way to deal with this is crushed ice.

Simply cover area with a generous amount of crushed ice. Let it melt. The water will be absorbed into the underlay, puff it up, as well as the carpet. Voila!

Do this before you have one of the Rug Rangers at Carpeteer come to clean your carpets and you will be left with a pristine perfect rug.

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Top 4 Simple Environmentally Friendly Carpet Cleaning Tips

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Top 4 Simple Environmentally Friendly Carpet Cleaning Tips

Although it is true that the dirt and dust in our homes is more visible during the spring period, this doesn’t mean that our homes are clean in the other months. That’s why we must keep our home clean all the time. One thing that is present in almost every modern home is the carpet...

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9 Essential Steps To Green Clean Your Carpets Back To Life

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9 Essential Steps To Green Clean Your Carpets Back To Life

When you buy carpet for your home, you want it to look its best all the time. But, your carpet has a natural enemy – it’s you! You do your best to keep it clean on a regular basis by vacuuming it.  However, time reveals that everything you did was for naught. The color of the carpet isn’t the same as it was when you bought it.  And, spot cleaning it only reveals the extent of the color change and how dirty the carpet actually is.

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Natural Alternatives to Bleach for Stain Removal

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Natural Alternatives to Bleach for Stain Removal

Bleach is almost synonymous with clean and sanitized white towels, linens and hard surfaces throughout your home. Could this age-old chemical be harmful for you and your family? While bleach is certainly a powerful disinfectant, the health and environmental costs of using it may convince you to look for some natural alternatives.

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A-Z Carpet Stains and How to Remove All of Them

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A-Z Carpet Stains and How to Remove All of Them

Cleaning Information for your most common stains

TYPE OF CARPET STAIN = Bold

PRODUCTS USED FOR REMOVAL = Italics 

Hard Alcohol Beverages, Beer

  • Shampoo and then dab with methylated spirits.

Blood

  • Dab with COLD water then shampoo.
  • If there are still traces, treat them with baking soda and a few drops of natural mild soap.

Butter, oil, gravy, sauces

  • Dab with white spirit or dry all natural cleaning solvent and then shampoo.
  • If the stain persists, dab with baking soda and a few drops of natural mild soap.

Candle wax and paraffin

  • Put blotting paper over the stain and go over with a WARM iron.
  • Dab with cloth and then sent free shampoo.

Chewing gum

  • Apply an anti-gum solution or dab with dry all natural cleaning solvent.
  • Option: Pore hot water over the gum to increase extractability. 

Chocolate and candy

  • Dab with WARM water (max 50 degrees C) or with diluted baking soda and a few drops of natural mild soap.

Coffee and Tea

  • Shampoo. If the stain persists, dab with methylated spirits of diluted baking soda and a few drops of natural mild soap.

Cosmetics and medicines

  • Apply white spirits or dry all natural cleaning solvent and then shampoo.

Eggs and albumins

  • Dab with 5% diluted baking soda and a few drops of natural mild soap or methylated spirits, then shampoo.

Glue, stain and varnish

  • Apply white spirits or dry all natural cleaning solvent and then shampoo.

Grass and vegetable stains

  • Moisten with environmentally friendly methylated spirits.

Inks, aniline and carbon

  • Remove as much as possible with blotting paper and then dab with solution of 30% methylated spirits and 70% water, than shampoo.
  • Pure lemon juice gives good results as well.

Jam, syrup and fruit juices

  • Dab with WARM water (max 50 degrees C).
  • If stain persists use white spirits or dry all natural cleaning solvent.

Milk and yogurt

  • Shampoo, then dab with 5% diluted baking soda and a few drops of natural mild soap or methylated spirits.
  • If the stain persists, use dry all natural cleaning solvent or white spirits.

Mud

  • Allow to dry and then go over with a vacuum cleaner.
  • Use a wet cloth to dap up whatever the vacuum couldn't collect 

Nail polish

  • Dab with acetone and then shampoo.

Rust

  • Use 3% diluted potassium oxalate or an anti-rust product.

Tar, grease and fuel oil

  • Dab with white spirits or dry all natural cleaning solvent and then shampoo.
  • Repeat action with methylated spirits and shampoo again.

Iodine

  • Dab with pure baking soda and a few drops of natural mild soap.
  • Vomit, urine and excrement
  • Dab with mixture of 50% vinegar and 50% water, or with methylated spirits and then shampoo.

Wax furniture and floor polish

  • Apply with white spirits or dry all natural cleaning solvent and then shampoo.
  • If stain persists apply 5% diluted baking soda and a few drops of natural mild soap or methylated spirits.

Wine and lemonade

Apply 50% vinegar and 50% water and then shampoo. Here's more on our wine removal article.

Quick tip! When using a wet cloth make sure to dab the stain instead of rubbing it.
Warning: Most mainstream brands make use of chlorine bleach, ammonia or any number of other chemicals that can wreak havoc on the environment and human health (including correlation to multiple types of cancer). Make your health and the environment a priority by making and/or buying all natural products.

Call 604.240.7787 or email info@carpeteer.com for 24/7 quality carpet cleaning and flood restoration in Vancouver.

Vancouver's small town local carpet cleaning experts since 1975.

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How to Remove Red Wine from Carpet in Five Steps

Photo by ian francis/iStock / Getty Images

Photo by ian francis/iStock / Getty Images

Before we get started there are two quick steps everyone should do.

  1. Blot up the spilled wine right away. The longer you let red wine sit in your carpet, the harder it will be to get rid of the stain. Do yourself a big favor by acting fast! As soon as you notice the spill, grab a paper towel or rag and blot the stain to pick up as much liquid as possible before it can set.

    • Always use an up-and-down blotting motion, not a side-to-side rubbing one. Rubbing will pick up some of the wine but force the rest deeper into the carpet fibers, making it much harder to remove the stain. This can also make the stained area from the wine even larger by spreading the liquid to the sides.
    • Work from the outside in, blotting the edges first and then moving to the center. This helps prevent the stain from getting any larger than it already is.
  2. Apply some cold water and keep blotting. Eventually, it will get difficult to blot more of the wine out. At this point, try getting the stain wet again with a small amount of cold water. This helps dilute the wine remaining in the carpet. Continue blotting (not rubbing) until the carpet is dry again.

Use White Wine and Baking Soda

  1. Pour a little white wine onto the stain. It may seem like the last thing you want to do is to pour more wine on your carpet, but clear-colored white wine can actually be a lifesaver if you don't have water handy. White wine dilutes the color of the red stain much like water, lessening the impact of the stain.

    • Some sources recommend clear, plain vodka if you don't have white wine. Try to avoid moscato and sweet dessert wines, which can leave a sticky, sugary mess.
  2. Blot the stain with a sponge. As long as you do it lightly enough, this will soak up some of the colour without pressing the stain into the carpet fibers.

    • If your sponge is already wet, wring it out before using it.
  3. Apply a baking soda paste. Baking soda can remove a "loosened-up" stain similar to the way salt's used in the section above. Instead of using dry baking soda, most sources recommend making a watery paste, then spreading it generously over the stain. Three parts water to one part baking soda should work well.

  4. Cover the stain with a clean cloth overnight. Set a heavy weight (like a dictionary) on top of the cloth while it sits. This constant, gentle pressure pushes the baking soda down into the stain so that it can clean more deeply.

    • The cloth you use will get a little damp, so you may not want to use a weight that's vulnerable to water damage.
  5. Vacuum up the baking soda once it dries. The baking soda should soak up the moisture from the stained area and form solid clumps on the surface. You can easily remove these clumps (and with them, the stain) using a vacuum.

    • As with the salt method above, if your carpet still has a powdery residue after the first vacuuming, pour a little cold water on it to dissolve the baking soda, then vacuum again.

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