Featured Antique Seed Bead Purse Help Stinks

Discussion in 'Antique Discussion' started by cxgirl, Jul 9, 2022.

  1. cxgirl

    cxgirl Well-Known Member

    Hi all,
    Looking for suggestions on how to get rid of the perfume stink on this purse. I've been airing it out for almost 4 weeks and I don't notice a difference in the smell, just as heavy a stink as when I started. It is 7"L x 6"W. I'm thinking late 1800s-early 1900s, but not sure where it would have been made. Found many of this pattern on-line, some say France, some say Germany, some don't know where.
    any information appreciated
    thanks for looking:)
    Library - 1 of 5.jpeg Library - 3 of 5.jpeg Library - 5 of 5.jpeg Imports - 1 of 1.jpeg Library - 4 of 5.jpeg
     
  2. moreotherstuff

    moreotherstuff Izorizent

    Maybe fill it with baking soda? Isn't that supposed to absorb odors?
     
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  3. cxgirl

    cxgirl Well-Known Member

    thanks MOS, good idea:) maybe I'll put some in a bowl and put inside the purse
     
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  4. lvetterli

    lvetterli Well-Known Member

    Agreed on baking soda. It takes time though. I bought an old wood and glass curio that reeked of tobacco. It had sat behind a smoker's chair for years apparently. The wood was oily-sticky and the glass foggy. After hours of washing down and scrubbing, it felt clean but still stunk. Since I needed it in a mall fairly quickly, I bought car deodorizer packets and hung them inside along with little tubs of baking soda. It took a while but everything is out of that curio except merchandise and the only thing you can smell is car deodorizer and it is faint.

    Linda
     
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  5. LauraGarnet02

    LauraGarnet02 Well-Known Member

    I was surprised! Was expecting the stink to be mildew or stale cigarette smoke, not perfume! Have you been airing it indoors or outdoors?

    I think I remember an old thread about getting the stink from old books. One of the techniques was sealing the books in a plastic airtight container or plastic bag with old fashioned clay kitty litter. That might work with baking soda too. Seal it up with the odor absorbing substance for a few days.

    That's a very nice little bag by the way. I like the design.
     
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  6. cxgirl

    cxgirl Well-Known Member

    thanks Ladies:) I've been putting it outside each morning and bringing in at night, was on papertowel on a dish. So I've put baking soda in a bowl inside the bag and then put them inside a tupperware bowl and sealed with a lid, will see what happens:)
    I like the design too, a bit different than you would expect to see on a purse:)
     
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  7. LauraGarnet02

    LauraGarnet02 Well-Known Member

    Since fresh air and sunshine didn't blow the stink off I hope the sealed up with baking soda works. An interesting experiment.
     
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  8. Aquitaine

    Aquitaine Is What It IS! But NEVER BORED!

    Moth crystals overnight might help as well....in a plastic bag.....
     
  9. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Wiping it down with alcohol wipes might help too, if any of it's on the beads instead of in the fabric.
     
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  10. cxgirl

    cxgirl Well-Known Member

    thanks evelyb30:) could very well be on the beads - do you mean rubbing alcohol?
     
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  11. cxgirl

    cxgirl Well-Known Member

    thanks Aquitaine:) I haven't seen moth ball/crystals for years, might be something to try:)
    yes, hopefully something will work:)
     
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  12. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Moderator Moderator

    old Mothballs contain naphthalene or paradichlorobenzene and the gas they give off is toxic, they are banned in many countries now.
    Very dangerous to pets too.
     
  13. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    I agree, they are banned here as well.
    Years ago, pre-ban, I got a seizure from the smell alone.

    If baking soda/bicarb doesn't work, try cat litter.
     
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  14. David Kiehl

    David Kiehl Well-Known Member

    Have you tried Fabreze?
     
    judy likes this.
  15. Aquitaine

    Aquitaine Is What It IS! But NEVER BORED!

    I AM careful when & where I use them.....I put them in my car, which spends a LOT of time in the garage, where mice seem to love to get in.....so I put a LOT in the spare wheel area, and the door pockets and anywhere else I thought the little vermin might like to start a family (which they DID in the spare tire well PRE-moth crystals!!!)! I also put just a few in the Vacuum bag when vac-ing the house-not EVERY time.... happen to like the smell of them and no dog odor when done!!! AND God-Willing, they haven't been back in my CAR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:singing::singing::singing::happy:
     
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  16. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Yep. A damp something with the alcohol on it. But carefully. Do not use on painted surfaces, but fine for plain glass.

    Oddly I don't mind the smell; it smells like childhood. We used to tie some in an old knee-high stocking and put them in the lawn mower shed to keep bees and nasties from building nests in there. Didn't do much to deter mice, but the wasps steered clear.

    I wouldn't. It's a chemical spray, and I wouldn't trust it around old fabrics.
     
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  17. Ownedbybear

    Ownedbybear Well-Known Member

    Cat litter. The Fullers Earth type. Stick it in a bag of it for a week, that'll fix it.

    Febreeze is the work of the devil.
     
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  18. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    Lovely purse, @cxgirl . I hope you get the unwanted aroma out.
     
  19. JR1969

    JR1969 Active Member

    Charcoal can help to absorb odors. Line a small plastic tub with it and place a towel down then the bag and close for a day or 2. You can buy plant charcoal it comes in small pieces.
     
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  20. JR1969

    JR1969 Active Member

    There is a spray called Lord Byrons Smokers Fabric Refresher you can get on Amazon. it helps remove all kinds of smells not just smoker smells.
     
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