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Paper Roses

(7,473 posts)
Fri May 6, 2016, 03:32 PM May 2016

One question, a million answers. Can you give me advice?

I have Googled and found too many answers.

I have a fabric shower curtain with a heavy duty liner(w/magnets). No mildew on either, just soap residue on the liner. I have tried to wash the liner in the machine but I think there must be something I can add to the cycle to clear the soap from the liner. My efforts look OK to begin with but as the liner drip dries, the soap residue still shows. This was an expensive liner and is in good shape. I want to make it look good but am finding no real solution. What do you use? I know this is just soap residue. Any suggestions as to what might dissolve it? I paid a lot for liner one with the heavy duty magnets, don't want to give up.
Thanks for any help.

11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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One question, a million answers. Can you give me advice? (Original Post) Paper Roses May 2016 OP
Do you have "hard water". Are you sure it is just soap residue or is it also mineral residue? PoliticAverse May 2016 #1
I agree - vinegar LiberalEsto May 2016 #2
Also shaking the water off the liner after a shower helps. edgineered May 2016 #4
Ditto. sinkingfeeling May 2016 #5
H2O2 OxQQme May 2016 #3
All good answers. It's diligence through maintenance that works. rusty quoin May 2016 #6
Curious why the need to rinse after H2O2? intrepidity May 2016 #10
I didn't know that. Thank you. rusty quoin May 2016 #11
Imagine Wash. state Desk Jet May 2016 #7
Grest site, bookmarked for later. Thanks N/T Paper Roses May 2016 #8
You are welcome. Wash. state Desk Jet May 2016 #9

PoliticAverse

(26,366 posts)
1. Do you have "hard water". Are you sure it is just soap residue or is it also mineral residue?
Fri May 6, 2016, 03:36 PM
May 2016

You can try some warmed vinegar to remove the residue on the liner.

 

LiberalEsto

(22,845 posts)
2. I agree - vinegar
Fri May 6, 2016, 03:54 PM
May 2016

I keep a spray bottle of half water, half vinegar in the shower to spray after showering. It cuts down on mold and soap residue very well.

edgineered

(2,101 posts)
4. Also shaking the water off the liner after a shower helps.
Fri May 6, 2016, 06:13 PM
May 2016

Generally speaking, just pinching the liner with your fingers and giving a good shake to get the water off helps it to stay free of all the bad things for much longer.

 

rusty quoin

(6,133 posts)
6. All good answers. It's diligence through maintenance that works.
Fri May 6, 2016, 11:57 PM
May 2016

I don't like doing that, so I replace cheap liners. I know it's not green, so maybe I should try H202 in a spray bottle myself, like the one person suggested, rather than harsher chemicals.

Spray it down along with the rest of the tile with a diluted H202, and use a spray head to rinse, but this sounds not so green either, because of the extra water use.

Maybe as you rinse your body of the soap, use one hand for yourself while spraying the H202 solution on all surfaces, in a spinning motion, and at the end give all surfaces a final rinse with the shower spray head, still spinning, and then shut it down.

I'm half joking here, but your problem really did make me think about soap scum, and the best way to get rid of it. You can rinse tile, and wipe it down with the same towel you used to dry yourself after each shower, but if you want to keep a nice liner, I can only think of removing it on a regular basis, putting it on a flat surface and using a brush, water, and elbow grease to get it off, and then rinse.

Good luck.

intrepidity

(7,307 posts)
10. Curious why the need to rinse after H2O2?
Tue May 24, 2016, 07:10 PM
May 2016

hydrogen peroxide just turns into water after it does it's business, right? Why rinse?

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