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How to remove nail polish from fabric

how-to-remove-nail-polish-from-fabric

So I recently managed to get not one, but TWO nail polish stains on this shirt, one on the shoulder and one by the collar… please don’t ask how, lol.

nail-polish-stains

I asked for advice on how to remove nail polish from fabric over on the Mashup Mom Facebook page, and got some great suggestions — so here’s how it went, and how to get nail polish out of a shirt!

  • By the way, if you haven’t yet joined us on Facebook, come on over to the Facebook Page and Hot Deals Group. We don’t always talk about stain removal, but you’ll find all sorts of other useful ways to save! 🙂

Step-by-step, here’s what I tried to remove that stubborn nail polish stain.

How to get nail polish out of clothes

off-and-rubbing

When I got the stains on this shirt, I had NO idea how to remove nail polish from fabric without ruining it. I figured the acetone in nail polish remover wouldn’t be great for the fabric, so asked you guys. Here’s what I tried.

Removing nail polish stains with rubbing alcohol

rubbing-alcohol

Lisa suggested tackling the nail polish stain with rubbing alcohol, so I started with the smaller stain.

  1. Fold up some paper towels and put them under the fabric, so that the stain doesn’t soak through to the back. (Use several layers — mine stained through a bit onto the towel and the rubbing alcohol did soak through to the back, although luckily the stain didn’t make it all the way through.)
  2. Soak a Q-tip in rubbing alcohol.
  3. Blot, blot, blot, blot blot blot…
  4. Keep changing out Q-tips for new ones soaked in rubbing alcohol as they get nasty.
  5. Lisa says: “Don’t wash it or get it wet with water til its out.”

qtips

Ta-da! Since this is rubbing alcohol, it also evaporated really quickly and left the shirt dry. This was kind of like magic — it removed the smaller nail polish stain in just four Q-tips (both ends), though I did have to scrub a little at the end to get the last stubborn bits off.

Removing nail polish stains with bug spray, like OFF

switch-to-cutter

Several people suggested this one. I started with OFF, but hardly any was left in the can, so switched over to Cutter fairly quickly.

remove-stain-with-cutter

I put folded paper towels underneath, sprayed the nail polish stain with Cutter, then did the same Q-tip scrubbing and blotting trick, continuing to spray the fabric in between and switching out for fresh Q-tips as necessary. Unfortunately, bug spray only worked to take out the larger bits of nail polish stain. You can see the nail polish coming off on the Q-tip, but once it got down to the remnants of the stain left on the fabric, it was pretty much useless. Plus, the fumes were disgusting!

stain-better-but-not-gone

So once it got to the point where the stain was better, but not gone, I switched back over to the rubbing alcohol trick and repeated the same nail polish stain removal steps as above with the smaller stain.

The nail polish stain removal verdict

212

It took about half an hour total to remove both stains, so you need a lot of patience to remove nail polish stains with rubbing alcohol. But, it really did work. I checked this morning when everything was completely dry, and the stains appear to be gone. The fabric might be very slightly pilled, but it could also be bits of Q-tip, lol — it’s barely noticeable. Update: After a trip through the washer, it’s all good. Q-tip fuzz, begone!

Thanks to everyone who suggested a way to get nail polish out of fabric — I’m amazed! I honestly thought I was going to have to toss this shirt, and I’d only worn it a couple of times.

By the way, this shirt is jinxed

I just bought this shirt while visiting my parents in Washington over the 4th of July. The first time I wore it there, I spilled olive oil on it, and spent a lovely afternoon at my Mom’s house scrubbing THAT stain with dish liquid and washing repeatedly. Wonder what I’ll get on it next… spaghetti sauce? Pine sap? Hmm. 🙂

Nicole

Saturday 31st of March 2018

The rubbing alcohol worked great for the fingernail polish removed on fabric! Just need a little patience to keep rubbing it lightly with q-tips. Thank you

Dee

Tuesday 26th of December 2017

Found your post about fingernail polish removal. Great to know. As a side note for future reference... here's a way to get out excess oil residue from cloth. Murphy' oil soap gets out extreme excess oil stains. Reasoning behind it is..... 'takes oil to get out oil'.. without having to us the necessary train load of elbow grease that most other cleaners seem to require. Just apply straight to the spot(s)... and let soak for a bit.. then wash. Suggest NOT drying in dryer. Just let air dry. And if not all out can repeat one more time. Ease of removal depends on amount of oil you have to remove from garmet. This has worked surprisingly well for me on occasion. May have to put through one extra wash cycle to get Murphy's oil soap smell out.. but is not so bad. Also if not a HUGE amount of oil.. SHOUT will get it out rather well. I try to use less invasive cleaning methonds first on most household things... but I must admit that for fast release of most food stains.. SHOUT works amazingly well on one application.

Moriya

Tuesday 19th of December 2017

A girl at the salon dropped a bottle of bright red polish. Got on my nicest Grey pants. The people at the salon used acetone remover to blot the area. Now I have a stain in the area from the polish remover, plus the original polish. Thoughts? Suggestions?

rachel

Tuesday 19th of December 2017

Depending on the fabric it may have damaged the pants, but maybe try the steps here: https://www.hunker.com/13423954/how-to-get-fingernail-polish-remover-out-of-clothes

maryann

Wednesday 22nd of July 2015

I see you mentioned oil on the shirt one day I got a pretty large olive oil stain on a blouse I wore for the first time I thought what do I have in the house that I could use to remove it besides detergent , I thought I'll try baking soda . So I made a paste of baking soda and water, I applied it to the stain, I left it on over night. The next day I added more water and rubbed the stain , then threw it in tthe wash stain was gone . it always worked for me.

Ellen

Monday 1st of June 2015

Thanks for the tip for removing nail polish with rubbing alcohol, tried on a new pair of white pants and bam it's gone.

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