<h1 class="Post__headline">I Could Never Get My White Sheets Really Clean, Until I Tried This 2-Ingredient Combo</h1>
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But (there’s always a but!) stripping the sheets off the bed can be gross. We have white sheets—which I love in theory because they feel extra fresh and are just so classic—but turning down the covers and wiggling the pillows out of their cases makes it very clear how not white our white sheets really are. Yellowed head marks and vague body forms on the sheets make it impossible to ignore the fact that it’s largely body oils that make sheets grimy. The only thing worse than confronting these stains when I take the sheets off to wash them is seeing that they’re still there when we make the bed later, after the sheets are washed.
Honestly, one of the reasons I switched from colored sheets to white ones is so that I could bleach them in my quest to obtain that hotel-room-pristine bedding feeling. I don’t like having bleach around or using it, but I was willing to do it for brilliant white bedding. No such luck, though. My attempts at bleaching did little to brighten our sheets, and I also didn’t like the faint chemical smell it left behind or how rough I know bleach is on cotton fibers.
<h2>How I Keep White Sheets White with Baking Soda and Vinegar (But Not Together!)</h2>
Here’s the formula: Add about a half cup of baking soda to the drum of the washing machine and then add distilled white vinegar to the fabric softener dispenser. This specificity is important to note: allowing vinegar and baking soda to combine in the process will render each of them no more useful than salt. Splitting them up, on the other hand, allows them each to work their magic without interference, since the vinegar gets released later in the cycle through the fabric softener dosing cup.
After my first load, I could hardly believe how much whiter and, incidentally, softer our sheets were. My husband even noticed—and y’all know that means there was a noticeable difference!
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Wow, how dirty were her sheets? I've have sets of white sheets but have never seen "vague body forms on the sheet" - ever. I may let my sheets go for a couple of weeks but they never look dirty when I toss them in the wash. Odds are the writer is washing her sheets in cold water and hoping for the best.