Bluing

A couple of us were talking about our "blue haired" grandmothers the other day (thanks, Katy and Chrislyn), and I was curious as to what bluing was all about.  My grandmother had waist length white hair that she braided every night and coiled on the back of her head every day.  She was very vain about her hair and used bluing to keep it from turning yellow.  Rarely, but once in a while, she would "get into the bluing too heavily" and her hair would indeed have a blue tinge.

http://www.mrsstewart.com/
Mrs. Stewart's® Bluing

As home washing tips are passed down from grandparent to parent to child, more and more people are discovering the value of Mrs. Stewart's Bluing (MS! Not only does it whiten whites, it also brightens colors and does so without harsh chemicals, prolonging the life of any garment. People are seeking environmentally safe products and they know that MSB is non-toxic and biodegradable.



The versatility of MSB seems infinite. While we manufacture MSB as a laundry whitener, many have found other uses for bluing as well. Make a Salt Crystal Garden, whiten dingy hair on a pet, reduce algae growth in bird baths, fish ponds and fountains, ease the pain of an ant bite or bee sting, and much more with this unique, versatile and economical product that has been a staple in many homes for over 125 years - since 1883!



Why do I need bluing?
How does it work?
Is it safe?
What are the ingredients?
To download the All About Bluing brochure in pdf format, click here.

If bluing were used to make things blue, it would be a simple matter to explain its action. Actually, it is used to make things white, and we will attempt to explain that phenomenon.

Blue and White Make the Whitest White
It is said that color experts can distinguish about 300 shades of white, and if you look at all the things around you that are white, you will notice the many different shades. Some are a pink- white, some are yellow-white, etc. The white which is the brightest of whites is one which has a slight blue hue. One of the more dramatic experiments to prove this point is to place a brand new white shirt or blouse next to one which has been laundered for perhaps a year or so and notice the difference. They will both look white until placed next to each other, when the new one will appear much whiter, and the blue hue will be evident.

Because blue-white is the most intense white, most artists, when painting a snow scene, will use blue color to intensify the whiteness. As color experts would explain it, the proof comes when two pieces of fabric are placed under a spectrograph - the one with blue added will reflect more light, making the fabric appear its whitest.

White Fabric Isn't White
In their original state, white fabrics are far from white. Unbleached cotton fabrics, known to the trade as "greige (grey) goods", are grey or yellow tinged. Raw wool is, too - even from the whitest fleece. Most of all the synthetic fibers are not white, but tend to be a greyish off-white color. These all have to be bleached, usually by some chemical treatment which removes most of the yellow or grey color. Even this bleaching is not enough. To make white goods acceptable to their customers, manufacturers of sheets, towels, linens, etc., put their fabrics through a process of bluing. So also do the makers of shirts and other white apparel.

The Blue Hue Must be Renewed
After the fabric goes into use, the effects of the bleaches wear off, soil and stain mar the color, and the material goes to the wash to be cleaned. Detergent and water lift out the dirt and stains, and successive rinses remove the soapy mixture. Sometimes a mild bleach is used to help remove the stains. If all this is thoroughly done, the fabric is clean, but it is not "snow-white". To counteract the rest of the yellow, blue must be added. A little diluted bluing in the washing process or in the last rinse water adds the necessary tint that makes the fabric really snow-white.
Mrs. Stewart's Bluing allows the consumer to re-blue their items at home.

In the early and middle 1900s bluing was used by everyone who wanted to have a white wash, and could be found in virtually all laundries. When washing was done by hand or in wringer washers, the second rinse tub was always the bluing rinse, the blue became the accepted color for laundry products. In the ensuing years, most new products, detergents and other additives were colored blue. Many of the manufacturers even claimed that their products contained bluing. In spite of those claims, many homemakers have discovered that nothing whitens like Mrs. Stewart's Bluing.

What's In This Stuff, Anyway?
We get many calls from people wanting to know the ingredients or contents of Mrs. Stewart's Bluing. Some are just curious. Some have allergies and are concerned about how they may react to the use of Mrs. Stewart's Bluing. Some call as environmentalists to determine the effect on our Earth that Mrs. Stewart's Bluing might have. Some are scientists and looking for the chemical makeup so they may better understand the experiments they are doing. If you are wondering about the Salt Crystal Garden and how it grows, go to Salt Crystal Garden.

Basically, bluing is made of a very fine blue iron powder suspended in water ( a "colloidal suspension"). We add a nontoxic amount of a pH balancer and a biocide to prevent the buildup of algae and bacteria. (This may be why Mrs. Stewart's Bluing is loved by farmers who tell us they use it in the water troughs of their farm animals and by owners of lily and fish ponds.)

Mrs. Stewart's Bluing is nontoxic, biodegradable, non-hazardous and environmentally friendly. While we cannot guarantee that no one will ever be allergic to Mrs. Stewart's Bluing, we can say that we have not seen any reports of such an allergy thus far. In fact, several of our customers use Mrs. Stewart's Bluing because it is one of the few laundry products from which they do not experience an allergic reaction.

Mrs. Stewart's Bluing is a simple, concentrated blue liquid that optically whitens white fabric. It does not remove stains, does not "clean", but adds a microscopic blue particle to white fabric which has been giving fabric that "just bought" whiteness for 120 years!


Mrs. Stewart's Bluing

Did you think Mrs. Stewart's Bluing was used only in the laundry?

Meet the most versatile product on a grocer's shelves! In the 100+ years that consumers have been using Mrs. Stewart's Bluing, dozens of additional uses for our product have been discovered! We know of no other product, laundry or otherwise, that has as wide a variety of uses. Virtually all of the uses below have been found by our consumers, who have written hundreds of thousands of letters over the years to tell us of their findings. Here are just some of them:

Magic Salt Crystal Garden
Brighten Swimming Pool Water
Whiter Hair
Whiter Pets
Relieve the Pain of Insect Bites
Make Glass and Crystal Sparkle
Reduce Algae Growth in Fountains, Bird Baths and Fish Ponds
Medical Laboratory and Drug Testing
Podiatry Laboratories for Casting
Pottery Glazing
Detect Plumbing Leaks
Fertilizer Research
Coloring Flowers
Marking Ski Racecourses

Whiter Hair:

Countless letters from elderly citizens tell us that Mrs. Stewart's Bluing is a wonderful addition to the rinse water when washing gray or white hair. It eliminates yellowing and gives their hair that beautiful whiteness which cannot be obtained even by products made especially for that purpose. It is absolutely safe, and because it is used by the drop, costs less than a penny per use! Use just a couple of drops in the rinse water. No wonder hair salons are beginning to contact us! Because we haven't tested MSB for whitening hair, we don't publish a specific formula. However, our customers tell us they wash and rinse their hair as normal. Then, they dilute a "couple" or a "few" drops of MSB in 1-2 quarts of water and run the diluted bluing through their hair as the final rinse. Some do this with every washing, some only when needed.

 

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Comments

  • 4/21/2009 8:55 AM Ileana wrote:
    Boyz oh boyz does this take me back to my childhood.
    I remember neighbours asking my mother... "Annie, how do you get your sheets so white?" or, "Annie, your husbands shirts and sheets are so white, they are almost blue." As a child I wondered at those comments and made it a point to watch my mother during laundry days, in particular... Sure enough, she added a cake or two (usually just one, because it seemed to be premeasured) of compounded "Bluing" to the second or third rinse water. (When I was a child, my mother used a wringer-washer) I was especially proud of my mother's laundry because it looked good, smelled better, and I helped hang it on the long line. ("Here, Ileana, hang onto this sheet, and don't you dare let it touch the ground." LOL) Mother purchased bluing in compound and liquid forms. I used the liquid form in place of ink. Mother did not mind, because the cost of a bottle of Waterman's ink was greater than a pint of bluing.

    Thanks for the memories Annette.
    Reply to this
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