How to Remove Lipstick from Cotton
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You'll need
Treatment ready
Lipstick on Cotton
Stain state
Fabric color
Fresh stain adjustment
This plan prioritizes speed and blotting because fresh stains are easiest before pigment spreads or sets.
Treat within an hour
Wax and dye combination — scrape off excess without rubbing, then degrease.
Steps
3
Supplies
3
Mode
fresh / color
Grab first
- 1Scrape or blot off the excess, then apply rubbing alcohol or an oil-based makeup remover to a clean cloth. Act before it dries. Because this is colored fabric, test solvents or peroxide on a hidden inside area before treating the visible stain.
- 2Work from the outside of the stain inward, switching to a fresh part of the cloth as the color transfers
- 3Rinse with cold water, wash normally, and air-dry
Do not: use hot water first — heat bonds makeup dyes to the fabric.
Safety note
Blot first. Rubbing pushes pigment deeper and makes the stain wider.
Safety note
For colored fabric, test any solvent or peroxide on a hidden inside area first.
Why this order works
Makeup is pigment held in wax or oil. Breaking the binder first releases color without grinding it farther into the weave.
Mixed stain? Deal with any protein part first using cold water, then treat the pigment or oil. Heat sets protein permanently.
Dry cleaners use: makeup & foundation stain remover →
Why this works
Cosmetic stains consist of pigment particles suspended in an oil or wax binder, sometimes with film-forming polymers from foundations and mascaras. Grease-cutting dish soap breaks the oil binder to release the pigment, which is then flushed outward in the rinse; rubbing the stain first only drives pigment deeper into the weave. Cotton, linen, and denim are cellulose-based fibers with good structural resilience, tolerating a wider range of temperatures and pH levels than protein or synthetic fibers — which is why more assertive treatments are safe on these fabrics.
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