View Full Version : Mouldy gloves...help
yungatart
6th February 2010, 13:51
We rode home from Manfield last weekend in the pissing rain, so of course, our gloves got saturated.
We have had really damp humid weather here since, and although the gloves were hung in the garage in an atempt to dry them out, they got covered in mould. They have improved since being hung out in the sun, but still have mould on them.
How do I get rid of it?
Any suggestions?
Thanks
golfmade
6th February 2010, 14:27
What type of gloves are they?
Would it be possible to wash them in the laundry? Otherwise perhaps hand wash and clean them with a decent soap.
Maha
6th February 2010, 14:43
What you will need is,
Some white vinegar/sea salt/brown sugar/one clove of garlic/shredded onion and a dash of Soy Sauce.
Mix together thoroughly in a bowl then add gloves.
Leave for 24 hours in a cool dry place.
Trust me on this, it should work.
If by chance it does not, look on the bright side, you could always B-B-Q them.
golfmade
6th February 2010, 14:46
What you will need is,
Some white vinegar/sea salt/brown sugar/one clove of garlic/shredded onion and a dash of Soy Sauce.
Mix together thoroughly in a bowl then add gloves.
Leave for 24 hours in a cool dry place.
Trust me on this, it should work.
Sounds like what I'll be having for lunch here soon...minus the gloves of course :D
pritch
6th February 2010, 15:26
Why not put them through the washing machine and then the dryer? On their own of course...
Quasievil
6th February 2010, 15:31
Happened to me once, you have to kill the little spore thingies so get some janola and give them a bit of a soak in that, then rinse out well and let dry slowly, failing that biff them I got some lying around somewhere you can have
slofox
6th February 2010, 15:47
My gloves got soaked on my Norfland Loop at New Year (first rain in three months - of course it fell on me, fuggit...). After two more days they developed a certain "effluvium" shall we say...:crazy:. I washed them through with wool wash and hung 'em out to dry. No pong ever since...mind you, I didn't have mould to cope with. But like quasi says, Janola will deal to it...
Mom
6th February 2010, 16:35
Yeah anything to kill the spores. Even vinegar will do it Tart. Just wipe the mould off them with a dilute solution and put in the hot water cupboard to dry. Friggen humidity we dont get it up here :dodge:
Slyer
6th February 2010, 16:42
Washing machine, sorted. :bleh:
yungatart
7th February 2010, 10:36
Thanks for the replies people. i will try the vinegar/janola trick and see what happens.....
rapid van cleef
7th February 2010, 10:39
for future notice........never force dry leather, either in the sun, or by a heat source, it will crack the leather and ruin it. use appropriate leather cleaners/cleaner and let dry naturally
Owl
7th February 2010, 10:46
Thanks for the replies people. i will try the vinegar/janola trick and see what happens.....
White vinegar not Janola!
Shit chick, don't you watch tele?:laugh:
http://tvnz.co.nz/view/tvone_shows_four_column_skin/tvone_how_clean_is_your_house_team_group
yungatart
7th February 2010, 11:01
Yopu could have told me that before I put them in Janola!
firefighter
7th February 2010, 11:07
I saw that too, bleach actually encouranges mould growth.
crazyhorse
7th February 2010, 11:39
This can be a useful link to keep, heard its good for alot of things.
http://grannyhomeremedies.blogspot.com/
Owl
7th February 2010, 11:46
Yopu could have told me that before I put them in Janola!
Don't you hate that when someone comes along too late with the answer to life, the universe and everything in it?
Though that would actually be 42, not white vinegar:laugh:
crazyhorse
7th February 2010, 11:48
Don't you hate that when someone comes along too late with the answer to life, the universe and everything in it?
Though that would actually be 42, not white vinegar:laugh:
yeah I heard that 42 was the meaning of life............... but I think the white vinegar might be more useful to yungatart at this stage.
Although the 42 thing is something i wonder "why is it 42"
motorbyclist
7th February 2010, 11:58
for future notice........never force dry leather, either in the sun, or by a heat source, it will crack the leather and ruin it. use appropriate leather cleaners/cleaner and let dry naturally
I find that chucking them on the hot water cylinder, maybe even "gripping" a hot water pipe, will dry them out real fast and I've never had any cracking.... however, they can come out a bit "crispy"
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