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Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,251
Registered: ‎03-16-2010

Any experiences giving a fabric sofa a gentle cleaning. It's not soiled just sat on, slept on, and in contact with bare skin. 

 

I'm wondering about a "chem-dry" method?

Stanley Steamer said their method gets the fabric too wet.

Fabric is tagged with code WS which means water and solvent both approved. 

 

The covers are not machine washable. The instructions say clean with the covers on the cushions (I'm assuming for shrinkage?) Dry cleaners required release of responsibility so I'm guessing there are risks?

 

I'm really tempted to get a new Little Green Machine and do it myself. 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 37,349
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

@granddi Go for it!  Little Green Machines are always a great price on BLack Friday sales and you will use it a lot if you are like us!  Good luck! 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 21,781
Registered: ‎07-26-2014

Re: Cleaning Upholstery?

[ Edited ]

@granddi "gentle cleaning. It's not soiled "

If not dirty what is it you are trying to get rid of if not soiled or dirty?  

Exactly what is gentle cleaning?  Wipe w/a damp cloth is my idea of a gentle cleaning...no professionals needed.

 

Why can't you vaccum & spray the sofa w/Fabreeze?

"Never argue with a fool. Onlookers may not be able to tell the difference."


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Super Contributor
Posts: 328
Registered: ‎02-18-2012

There are two products I have used in the past.  Forcefield Fabric Cleaner which is offered on Amazon, and Fuller Brush Upholstery cleaner.  For each, I would spray product on a damp microfiber cloth, then wipe down the furniture piece.  

 

I used the Forcefield directly on couch for actual spots created by my grandchildren and it did a great job.  

 

 These products would do a great job for light cleaning jobs.  Both can be sprayed directly on the furniture if you prefer.  

 

 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 27,808
Registered: ‎10-03-2011

If it's not actually soiled, I'd use a steamer to relax the wrinkles and sanitize, and I'd vacuum it (use a crevice tool in the cracks) to bring up the nap.

Super Contributor
Posts: 477
Registered: ‎10-21-2025

@FLtricia wrote:

There are two products I have used in the past.  Forcefield Fabric Cleaner which is offered on Amazon, and Fuller Brush Upholstery cleaner.  For each, I would spray product on a damp microfiber cloth, then wipe down the furniture piece.  

 

I used the Forcefield directly on couch for actual spots created by my grandchildren and it did a great job.  

 

 These products would do a great job for light cleaning jobs.  Both can be sprayed directly on the furniture if you prefer.  

 

@FLtricia 

 

Exactly how I clean my sofa! Always looks great after cleaning.


 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 15,330
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

You can fill a new/clean bucket with warm water and either dish liquid or laundry detergent and using a washcloth.. clean upholstery.

 

I used this method for many years.

 

Just continually wipe furniture cushions and squeeze cloth into sudsy solution. Rinse with clean water.  Takes a day for a good 'drying out'. 

 

My furniture now is 'Performance Fabric that can be machine washed.

 

But no one ever seems to address the cleanliness of their upholstery.  It gets dirty just like floors do!

 

Same for walls.  One home I had wood panelled walls.  It 

showed* dust just like a table top.  So when *spring cleaning*, I knew walls needed to be wiped down, too.

 

I clean the upholstery in my vehicles, too.  Leather and leatherette.  Gets dirty just like our clothes do!  I can't stand getting into people's cars (they may be expensive!), but I KNOW they don't clean the upholstery. Ugh. I throw my clothes in the wash as soon as I get home.  That includes coats, too!

Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,251
Registered: ‎03-16-2010

Thanks all yall. 

I used the Force Field spray on a cloth and wiped.

Then followed with the Hot water+ little dawn in the Green Machine. Too much dawn will foam too much.

 

Dried the cushions on the patio. But they were not too soaked. 

 

I didn't even think about using my Big Rowenta steamer.