[personal profile] rootofnewt
I bought a skirt from an Indian import shop last year. After the first time I wore it, I noticed that it reeks of rubber. The smell appears to come from the cotton portions--it's a cotton and rayon skirt. The smell doesn't emanate from the waistband at all. I've tried everything to get rid of the smell--milk soaks, borax soaks, baking soda soaks, washing soda soaks. Nothing has helped. I've tried letting it air out in airy spaces for *weeks*. The smell remains. I've spritzed it down with alcohol and water--no luck. I even tossed it, slightly damp, into a barely heated dryer for 20 minutes--no luck. It's been tossed into bins with charcoal, tossed into bins with newspaper, tossed into bins with baking soda, left in cupboards with bowls of vinegar. The smell will not depart.

What the hell can I do? Is this skirt salvageable? The matching blouse doesn't reek at all.

Date: 2005-03-06 07:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] krasota.livejournal.com
It's blue. And deodorant would discolor the rayon, plus it's technically just going to mask the odor. I want the odor gone. :/

Date: 2005-03-06 04:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lupa.livejournal.com
some deodorants have neutralizer, not just masking. i discovered that when i was making perfumes.

that does remind me, though! have the basins you've been soaking in been stainless steel?

Date: 2005-03-06 04:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] krasota.livejournal.com
yep. stainless steel or enamel coated steel.

for the charcoal, I used a plastic rubbermaid bin that does not and has never smelled of rubber.

Date: 2005-03-06 05:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lupa.livejournal.com
damn, then i don't know what to suggest; sorry :(

Date: 2005-03-06 05:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] krasota.livejournal.com
I contemplated exposing it to smoke and then airing it out. The smoke particles *could* bond to the rubbery smell ones. It's a long skirt, though, so taking it to a filthy club is out. Most of my friends who smoke indoors all have cats and that's not an option.

I think I might have to make plans to take it to a safe dry cleaner.

Another option would be finding a cleaner that specializing in smoke repairs. An ozone chamber *could* remove the smell, but at what cost?

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