How to Remove Marker from Rayon
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You'll need
Treatment ready
Marker on Rayon
Stain state
Fabric color
Fresh stain adjustment
This plan prioritizes speed and blotting because fresh stains are easiest before pigment spreads or sets.
Act immediately
Permanent marker ink bonds to fibres fast. Isopropyl alcohol now, before the polymer cures.
Steps
3
Supplies
3
Mode
fresh / color
Grab first
- 1Put a white cloth under the fabric, then dab rubbing alcohol or hand sanitizer onto the stain with a cotton swab. Act before it dries. Because this is colored fabric, test solvents or peroxide on a hidden inside area before treating the visible stain. Use less liquid and less rubbing than usual because this fabric is sensitive.
- 2Blot gently and move to a clean part of the cloth as the ink comes out
- 3Rinse with cold water and lay flat to dry — don't wring it out
Do not: scrub or soak rayon — it's fragile when wet and the ink spreads.
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
Solvent work comes before water-heavy washing because the ink binder has to loosen before pigment can rinse out.
Mixed stain? Deal with any protein part first using cold water, then treat the pigment or oil. Heat sets protein permanently.
Dry cleaners use: Amodex ink & stain remover →
Why this works
Ink is a pigment or dye suspended in a polymer resin or oil binder that polymerizes and cures as it dries onto fibers. Isopropyl alcohol dissolves the resin binder without harming most fabrics, releasing pigment particles; working from the outer edges inward prevents dissolved ink from wicking into clean areas. Rayon is a semi-synthetic fiber made from regenerated cellulose that weakens significantly when wet and distorts easily from agitation or heat. All treatments should use gentle blotting rather than rubbing, and the garment should be laid flat to dry to preserve its shape and dimensions.
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