House Cleaning

How to remove Soap from Bathroom tiles

Our bathroom tiles are constantly put to the test by soaps and vapors. So the dirt often ends up depositing on the glaze and between the joints, opacifying the natural brilliance of our tiles.

How do you bring them back? Simple! To remove dirt and soap from our tiles, we need to adopt a few small tricks. Let’s go and find out together how to remove soap from bathroom tiles.

Needed: Baking soda, Lemon juice, Buckskin cloth, Laundry brush, Sawdust.

So let’s start discovering how to clean the tiles in our bathroom from the soap accumulated on the surface. Let’s start with those of the walls. The latter tend to get dirty very easily as toilets are often positioned near their surface. Consequently, the soap used is deposited in the interstices and between the joints.

The intervention to remove the accumulated soap uses hot water applied together with lemon juice and sodium bicarbonate. The purpose of natural products is to act in a completely natural and non-aggressive way.

The lemon has a degreasing and dissolving action while the baking soda applies a light abrasion. Both then prevent the water from generating limescale again once it dries.

After the intervention, possibly helping us with a laundry brush to remove the harder soap, we use a chamois cloth that restores their natural splendor to the tiles. If the tiles to be cleaned from soap stains are those of the floor, also, in this case, we can intervene with natural products and some household cleaning tools.

To intervene in cleaning our tiled bathroom flooring, we can carry out a preliminary washing with water. In this way, we will clean it, and at the same time, we will soften the soap that has solidified. At this point, we take a bowl, and inside, we create a sort of abrasive paste, mixing baking soda powder, a few drops of lemon juice, and a cup of white vinegar.

The product created will then be sprinkled over the entire floor. Then with a broom, we rub with concentric circular movements. In the end, we use very thin sawdust, which will use to dry the surface and at the same time exert an additional abrasive action. When we remove it, we will finally get a floor completely free from traces of soap, perfectly sanitized and shiny, as a bathroom deserves.

Note: For greater cleansing, we let our natural product act for a few minutes before removing it from the surface.

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