How to Remove Ink from Wool

medium risk dye stain 5 home steps 3 pro steps ~25 min

Expert-validated protocol from GONR Labs — home treatment and professional method.

🏠 Home Treatment

1
Dab the stain with a cloth dipped in rubbing alcohol.
2
Work from the outside edge toward the center. Swap to a clean part of the cloth often.
3
Keep dabbing until no more color transfers to the cloth.
4
Rinse gently with cold water.
5
Lay flat on a towel to air dry — no heat, no wringing.

Recommended Products

🧴
Woolite Delicates Enzyme-free, pH-neutral formula designed specifically for delicate protein fibers — safely cleans without fiber damage

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⚠ Safety Warning

Test on an inside seam or hidden area first — delicate fabrics can react unpredictably. Never use bleach, enzyme cleaners, or hot water. Use cold water only. Handle gently — rubbing or wringing damages the fibers. Lay flat to dry.

🔬 Why This Works

Ink — ink is a dye in an oil-based carrier — it's designed to permanently mark surfaces. Wool is a delicate natural fiber, and ink pigments bond tightly to its structure. Heat or harsh chemicals will set the stain permanently and damage the fiber. Cold water and gentle cleaning agents are the only safe approach — anything stronger risks destroying the fiber along with the stain.

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👔 Professional Treatment

This is what your dry cleaner would do. Professional methods use commercial-grade solvents, specialized spotting boards, and controlled dwell times. If you're a dry cleaning operator, these are the steps for your counter reference.
1
Apply VDS carefully. On protein fibers like wool and silk, avoid aggressive tamping. VDS dissolves dye pigments without attacking the fiber. Blot gently with clean cloth.
VDS (Volatile Dry Solvent) 5-10 minutes Gentle solvent — safe for wool and silk dry side
2
Apply sodium hydrosulfite to reduce the remaining dye color. This is safer than oxidizing agents on wool and silk. Monitor closely and flush as soon as the color lifts.
Sodium hydrosulfite (reducing agent — safe for protein fibers) 5 minutes Reducing treatment — eliminates dye color without fiber damage wet side
3
Flush with NSD to remove all chemical residue. Follow with a fiber conditioner rinse to restore hand and sheen. Air dry flat.
NSD (Neutral Synthetic Detergent) with fiber conditioner 3-5 minutes Gentle flush with fiber conditioning wet side
Customer explanation: This one took some work — the ink stain on your garment needed a multi-step treatment to break it down. Ink is designed to be permanent — it's one of the most challenging stain types. The treated area may continue to improve over the next day or two as it fully dries.

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📞 When to Call a Professional

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I remove ink from wool at home?

Yes. Fresh ink stains on wool can usually be removed at home with the right products and technique. Follow the home treatment steps above.

Will ink permanently stain wool?

Not necessarily. Speed matters — the sooner you treat the stain, the better the outcome. Follow the correct removal sequence to prevent setting.

What should I NOT use on ink stains on wool?

Test on an inside seam or hidden area first — delicate fabrics can react unpredictably. Never use bleach, enzyme cleaners, or hot water. Use cold water only. Handle gently — rubbing or wringing damages the fibers. Lay flat to dry.

When should I call a professional for ink on wool?

If the stain has set for more than 48 hours, if the material is vintage or irreplaceable, or if your DIY attempts haven't worked after two tries, consult a professional cleaner.

How does a professional treat ink on wool?

Professionals use commercial-grade solvents and specialized spotting equipment to treat ink on wool. The professional section above outlines the exact approach used by expert dry cleaners.

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