Spot Cleaning Carpet – There’s an App for That

wool clean app

 

Description

Easy-to-use guide for removing common spots and spills from all types of carpet and rugs. This unique guide for carpet owners, carpet retailers, housekeepers and facilities managers provides clear and expert advice from an independent and trusted source.

Features:
• Step by step solutions to common carpet stain problems.
• Select from dozens of stains.
• Swipe side to side to follow the simple advice steps.
• Complete listing of all cleaning products certified as safe for use on synthetic and wool fiber carpets and rugs.
• Map of WoolSafe Approved professional carpet cleaner locations nearest to App user.
• Contact details with one-touch call, email or web visit to WoolSafe Approved Service Providers you can trust.

Click HERE to download this FREE app for iPad and/or iPhone

Another Use for White Wine: Clean up Red Wine Spill

It’s one thing to not cry over spilled milk, but it’s an entirely different scenario to hold back tears when a full glass of red wine leaves its mark on your white carpet! What can you do to remove red wine stains from your carpet, area rugs or clothing?

The First Response

Take a clean cloth and dab the spill in an effort to get the excess wine up and out of the carpet or clothing fibers ASAP. Once you have the majority of the spill blotted up, next you can tackle the stains with a variety of wine stain weapons. For starters you can take your favorite carpet shampoo or clothing stain remover, and clean as you would if the wine stain were a bit of dirt on the carpet or clothing. Or you can go for a less conventional, but often times more successful approach and try one of these tried and true wine stain solutions.

A Host of Tried and True Stain Removers

Depending on what you have on hand, you can “MacGyver” a wine stain removal solution based on what you have available. An arsenal of everyday red wine stain removers include: hydrogen peroxide, baking soda, soda ash, vinegar, club soda, salt, white wine, and a must-have product called Wine Away.

Hydrogen Peroxide and Baking Soda

When red wine hits a white shirt, table cloth or light colored carpet, try to blot up as much of the wine as possible and then spray hydrogen peroxide on the stain, followed by a hefty sprinkle of baking soda. Make sure that the peroxide and soda fully cover the stained area and let it sit for 2-3 minutes. Then rinse with water and if it’s a shirt or table cloth pop it in the laundry as usual. This method and the product, “Wine Away” are my silver bullets for quickly and completely removing red wine stains.

White Wine for Red Wine Stains

When red wine is spilled onto your carpet or clothes, white wine can be your true companion. White wine will help neutralize red wine and will make it easier to lift the color off of your carpet or clothing. Simply pour white wine over the stained area and very gently blot the liquid up with a thick towel (be very careful not to rub as this will force the stain into the carpet or clothing fibers). If the stain is still visible, you can add salt or soda to continue lifting out pigment.

Club Soda and Wine Stains

Club soda can be poured on the stain and the carbonation will help to lift the stain from the carpet fibers while the salt acts as a buffer to keep the stain from setting.

Vinegar and Soap or Soda

Vinegar does a nice job of neutralizing the purple pigments and can be combined with the stain-fighting force of either soap or soda. I apply laundry soap or washing soda directly over the vinegar and give it a few minutes to soak in, then rinse and wash.

Salt for Wine Stains – Who Knew?

Salt can be poured on the spill to keep the wine from setting until you figure out which method of clean up you would like to go with.

Wine Away – Stain Remover

Wine Away has been tested and recommended by the Good Housekeeping Institute and is even endorsed by Gourmet magazine. It is truly a wine world wonder that every red wine lover should have stowed in their cleaning cabinet. I even keep their travel size in my suitcase, just in case.

There are several solid methods for removing red wine stains that have worked well in a pinch, see which one works well for you. Just remember, whatever you do, don’t let the spill sit for long before taking action, the longer it sits the more difficult it will be to lift the stain from your carpet or clothing.

Flooring Warranties and Expectations: Oh, what tangled webs we weave


REPOSTED from The Floorcovering Institute Blog
By Lew Migliore

We surely see some tangled messes in the flooring industry when customers buy flooring products based on marketing and not based upon choosing the right products for their location or application. Invariably, the product doesn’t live up to their expectations. Flooring warranties are part of the marketing package; they are not insurance against a bad product choice and we need to do a better job at making sure our sales people and customers understand the difference.

For every application there is an appropriate product. The right product in the right place, and there always is one, will perform up to the expectations of the end user. The role of the flooring professional is to guide the buying decision toward the right product. In the absence of professional help a consumer is left to make a decision based upon marketing alone. Even with “professional help” they can come away confused. Here’s a great example of a consumer who is trying to make the right carpet decision but is “so confused.”

A warranty, or guarantee, is an assurance of the quality of or of the length of use to be expected from a product offered for sale often with a promise of reimbursement.

All warranties come with exclusions. Most warranties are never fully read or even seen until there’s a problem and then the consumer is left to interpret them alone only to find that the warranty rarely covers what they thought it did. Take “wear” for example.

The Wear Warranty: What the Consumer Hears

“Wear” to our carpet industry means the abrasive loss of fiber, up to 10% loss over a period of 5 or 10 years, depending on how the warranty reads. To a consumer it means something totally different.

When a consumer hears “wear” they think “appearance retention.” Naturally, any change to the product appearance they weren’t expecting – generally after a short period of time – is what they consider “wear” …. traffic lanes that appear matted or crushed or carpet that is disarrayed in front of a favorite sofa or chair, or what I like to call “ugly out.” When the product doesn’t look the same in these areas as it does in areas not used so much, consumers think it is “wearing” prematurely. This misunderstanding is the genesis of many complaints and claims. Stain warranties are another.

Stain Warranties: Spot vs. Stain
Stain warranties typically state that the carpet offers improved resistance to stains when the carpet is properly installed and maintained in its original single-family interior location. (This makes the phrase “properly installed and maintained” very important but warranties rarely say what that is) …. but more to my point…what is a stain and what is a spot and why does it matter?

Spot vs. Stain

A spot is caused when a foreign substance is spilled onto the floor leaving a residue that attracts dirt that creates a dark spot. A stain is the result of a foreign substance coming in contact with the surface of the flooring that either imparts color to or strips the color from the floor. Spots will clean out, stains will not. A stain warranty doesn’t mean the carpet won’t get dirty or show dirt.

Stain exclusions

Stain warranties exclude stains from non-food and non-beverage substances. Staining from acne medications, household cleaners, swimming pool chemicals, chlorine bleach, insecticides, plant foods, vomit, feces, and other harsh substances are not covered by these warranties. These warranties cover staining only; not soiling. Most perceived stains are actually spots or soil. Oh by the way….all those “Oxy” type cleaning products you see on TV? They stain flooring!


No Mat / No Crush Warranty

This is one of my favorites. No mat no crush warranties say the carpet will not mat or crush from foot traffic. This warranty excludes stairs and hallways. Carpet is a vertically oriented textile floor covering and when walked on repeatedly, particularly in concentrated, unalterable and pivotal areas, it mats and crushes. This is what it does naturally; it’s the law of physics at work. What the warranty should say is that the carpet is guaranteed to mat and crush or compact to a certain extent. Depending on the construction the matting may be unnoticeable or very noticeable, but it is going to occur.

Exclusions, Legalese and Marketing Adding to the Confusion

There are those who think that warranties are the single biggest injustice perpetrated on the consumer because what is given in one paragraph is taken away in the next three and what they think is covered is not. Warranties are largely marketing tools written by legal and marketing departments and not so much protection against a product that fails to perform.

Making the Right Decision

Buying decisions should start with qualifying the user and the intended use of the product. That is more important than marketing or warranty promises. A conscientious flooring professional will know the product and what it was designed to do – and not do. If the right product is chosen and installed properly you’ll rarely ever need to read the warranty – or need a claims and performance specialist like me.


Hemphill’s Rugs & Carpets

230 East 17th Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627

In our showroom, we do not like to “over sell” warranties and claims. It simply makes for unrealistic expectations from customers in the long run. This translates into an unhappy customer. Most of the business at Hemphill’s Rugs & Carpets comes from repeat clients and referrals. When you shop at our showroom, you will discover why.

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