You have always used water and detergent to wash your clothes. Then why would you suddenly shift from the conventional methods of getting rid of stains from your garments and use a dry method? Is the method really dry and does it really get rid of the stains?
It is believed that the invention of dry cleaning was the result of an accident. The story says that a petroleum-base fluid had accidentally spilled on greasy fabric. The fluid quickly evaporated, taking the stains with it thus giving rise to a new method of cleaning garments - dry cleaning.
Contrary to common belief, dry cleaning is not completely a ‘dry’ process. Dry cleaning process uses a cleaning fluid in which all garments are immersed and cleaned in a liquid solvent and not in water. The fact that there is no water is the reason why the process is termed ?dry cleaning?. It removes dirt and stains in a more effective way than water does. The process of dry cleaning involves pretreatment of stains or spots using special cleansing chemicals. The second step of cleaning begins as the garments are loaded into a machine. Throughout the cleaning process the fluid is filtered to ensure its clarity.