Skip to content

Get Your Carpets Professionally Cleaned 

Good carpets can cost a fortune, but no matter how expensive and great they complement the interior of your home, they will only make a good impression if they are clean. As life happens in your home, so do stains, spills, and foot traffic. A well-maintained carpet gives a feeling of cleanliness throughout the room. Another reason to clean your carpets regularly is that they can retain harmful microorganisms that directly impact the health of your entire family. One of the biggest enemies of carpets is stains. Here we can give some recommendations on how to clean different types of spots on your carpet.

Cleaning coffee stains

If your carpet is light or white, imagine what a coffee stain would look like. Such a stain would make you even want to throw it away. But buying a new one requires extra money to the monthly budget. The truth is that you need to act quickly to be able to clean such stains. First, soak up with a towel or kitchen paper. Make a mixture of vinegar, water and detergent. Rub hard until the stain disappears completely.

Bloodstains

These stains are difficult to clean but not an impossible task. You need to mix cold water and washing powder. Pour the mixture over the stain and rub until it disappears.

Grease or oil stains

These stains are common, especially on kitchen and dining room carpets and are so unpleasant! Here, too, act quickly before the blood has dried. Absorb the liquid and apply plenty of shaving cream. Less than 1% of people know about this trick; in practice, most never use it. Rub and soak with a sponge until the stain is completely gone.

Stains from ketchup or tomato sauce

The ketchup stain is difficult to remove. It is advisable to sprinkle salt as soon as it appears. Once it dries, try cleaning it with a vacuum cleaner. Rub with a sponge and repeat the procedure if the stain has not disappeared.

Wine stains

Shaving cream is a highly effective product for cleaning annoying stains from the floor. Put some shaving cream but of the type used as a spray. The tube cream also helps, but its effectiveness is significantly lower. A little shaving cream on the carpet, then wait a while for it to work and clean. If the stain is not gone, you can try again, but this time rub the area with a towel.

Pet stains and odour removal

Removing stains and odours from pets is something that all pet owners face at some point. If your pet soils your precious carpet, it causes an unpleasant feeling and smell. So you will have to deal with this problem as soon as possible. The longer the odour molecules remain on the carpet, the harder it will be to eliminate the stain. As ordinary detergents are not effective enough, it is good to find professional help so as not to ruin your carpet.

Seek professional help for pet stains removal from carpets

Ink stains

Here it is important to emphasize that you should not rub the stain. All you have to do is soak it in alcohol. Alcohol breaks down ink. Use a sponge soaked in alcohol and place it on the ink stain. After a while, the spot will disappear. When this happens, you have to dry the carpet.

With the above recommendations, you can clean stubborn stains from any carpet quickly and easily. It is important to remember that you need to act fast immediately after the paint dries and then wash it. If you still can’t deal, you can search for professional help.

Professional cleaning significantly helps your carpet look new for a longer time. The workers will do everything within the day. It is clear to everyone that dirty carpets can spoil the air in the room and cause microscopic insects and mould to multiply. That endangers the health of your family. Many people must learn to clean and wash the carpet at home every 5-6 months, even more often if there are children and pets. This job can be one of the most time-consuming and demanding activities. For this reason, more and more people are using the carpet cleaning service by professional cleaning companies like us.

The advantages of professional carpet cleaning

The people who do this job thoroughly inspect the carpet – the fabric, the fibres and more – and decide what products will be most suitable for it and what technology they will use. All this is to break down dirt and stains and separate from the carpet’s fibres, leaving no sticky residue.

We have reliable and responsible cleaning employees, proven in their work in homes and offices. Meet the highest standards as well as the specific needs of customers. We use the best modern machines to clean carpets from dust, dirt and stains.

So if you want to save time, effort, money and labour, trust our professional cleaning company!

Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Persian Carpets

Persian carpets have been prized for a long time, and they’re still prized today, even if they do need a bit of extra care and attention in the way of cleaning. But what makes Persian carpets so special, and why have they been famous and desirable for so long?

Join me on a journey of discovery as we delve into the past to find out more (ooh – I just channelled a cheesy announcer from the History Channel).

The Origins Of Persian Rugs

At some time during antiquity, at least before 400 BC, someone in the Fertile Crescent area known as Mesopotamia had a bright idea. Instead of simply weaving long strands of wool and other substances into a flat mat, this inventor tried knotting loops around the warp threads on the loom, then cutting the loops open, producing the pile carpet. The result was plusher, softer and warmer – just the thing for softening what you’re sitting on, whether that something was the stony ground under a nomad’s tent or a palace in one of the early ancient cities like Ur, Nineveh, Susa or Babylon. Once the idea had caught on, it quickly became apparent that if one is knotting in the threads to make the pile individually, it’s possible to use different colours and make intricate patterns a lot more easily than you can by weaving. This way, the artistic tradition of Persian carpets began.

The earliest known example of a proper piled Persian carpet comes from about 400 BC, and it was found in the grave goods of a Scythian warlord. It’s a sophisticated piece of work in gorgeous bright red and yellow, with a design of yellow horse riders riding anticlockwise on a red background just inside the characteristic border, then red bulls on a yellow background going clockwise, and a central panel of abstract squares.

Certainly, by the time of the Greek military historian Xenophon (about 370 BC), Persian carpets had got something of a reputation, and Xenophon suggests that they were luxurious enough and precious enough to be used as gifts sent to foreign rulers in attempts at diplomacy. Although few attempts at diplomacy involving Persian carpets could be as spectacular (or successful) as the one that Cleopatra is alleged to have sent to Julius Caesar – she arranged to have herself wrapped up in it while wearing either not an awful lot or her royal regalia. It’s possibly a myth, but the story certainly didn’t hurt the image of the carpet!

The tradition continued more or less unchanged for the next 500 or so years, with Persia (now Iran) being the centre of the carpet trade. In 651 AD, the Arabs invaded and conquered the ruling house of the Sassanids, bringing a new religion with them. This religion, Islam, brought some changes to Persian carpets. The religion forbade the depiction of animal or human forms, so carpet designs started turning to floral and abstract patterns – although some examples with animals and people can be found (probably because these could fetch an excellent price from those who didn’t follow that religion and were willing to pay for fine art). Secondly, prayer mats became a must-have, so the demand for carpets soared. It’s about this time that we get the first mention of carpets being used to soften floors rather than as upholstery. It’s also that Turkish rugs broke off from Persian carpets and became distinct.

Persian carpets are distinct and are the most prized of all the Middle Eastern carpet styles because of their intricate patterns, which are complex and detailed. The complicated abstract squiggle characteristic of these rug designs (and similar patterns in tiles) gave us the word “arabesque” in the design sense rather than the ballet sense.

How Persian Carpets Are Made

Traditional Persian carpets are made from pure sheep’s wool, although other materials are used nowadays, especially for the backing. However, natural materials are a must. Backings are usually made from cotton, as this doesn’t shrink as unevenly as wool, especially if it gets wet. Other natural fibres can be added in silk, mohair, or camel hair. However, the most common thread will be good old sheep’s wool. Because of the popularity of Persian carpets worldwide, the local sheep farmers can’t produce enough wool to meet the demand, so they have to import it from places that the great travellers of the past never even dreamed of, such as New Zealand. For a traditional Persian carpet, the wool is hand-spun – although quite a bit is spun on machines rather than on wheels or spindles to meet demand.

If you do anything in the way of handcrafts, you’ll know how to take care when washing wool to ensure that it doesn’t lose its softness or feel up. Getting the temperature right and not felting the wool is essential just for a woolly jersey; it’s even harder to do in the case of a Persian carpet, which is why if you’ve got the real deal or even a cheap imitation, it’s not a good idea to try cleaning it yourself.

The other key ingredient of a genuine Persian carpet (or, for that matter, a Turkish rug) is the one that makes it so delicate from a carpet cleaning perspective. This is the use of natural plant-based dyes. Although some cheaper versions use the bright colours possible with synthetic dyes (the designers who make carpets as art often use these to get the effect and shades they want), the real deal uses the natural stuff sourced mainly from plant materials: madder for the bright reds, indigo for blue, turmeric or onion skins for yellow and oak galls for black. These colours are notoriously not colour-fast, so if Persian carpets made with these dyes get wet, they could run, and the intricacy of the pattern will be spoiled. This is the other reason why you should never try to clean a genuine Persian carpet made the traditional way with natural fibres and natural dyes yourself.

A proper Persian carpet is hand-knotted. However, because this is so labour-intensive, much of what you will find on the market has been machine-woven. The hand-knotted ones tend to be very expensive, and they are real works of art – best hung on your wall rather than put down on the floor of your hallway!

Cleaning Persian Carpets

If you have a genuine Persian carpet, you should NEVER try cleaning it yourself. Even if you have a cheaper imitation, it’s best to leave the job of deep cleaning it to professionals to prevent problems with felting. Yes, you can gently vacuum a Persian carpet on an everyday basis, or you could take it outside and give it a good shaking and beating as an old-school housemaid would. But don’t try deep cleaning it or steam cleaning it. You will regret it. Deep cleaning is essential all the same, and in a lot of cases, annual deep cleaning by a professional is one of the conditions of the warranty on such carpets.

A professional carpet cleaner will be able to dry clean your Persian carpet. This isn’t like the dry cleaning done with harsh chemicals. Instead, in the HOST system, it involves tiny microsponges that contain enough moisture to attract the dirt and grime that’s dared to sully your carpet but not enough to wet the carpet and make the dyes run. These microsponges are brushed through the fibres and left to work their magic (although they won’t be able to make your carpet into a flying carpet!). After that, they are vacuumed up, leaving the knotted fibres clean, fresh, and in perfect condition.

Regular Carpet Cleaning – Green and energy effective Technology?!

How to keep the home and the office carpet spotless and smelling well? We know that it is an important part of the indoor environment and influences on our comfort, well-being and health, especially. But there is something more.


Recently I have understood pieces of evidence which are very curious for me and sound not only interesting but also really impossible. According to the experts and the experiments they have made, the carpet is like an air filter in the dwellings. Carpeting improves the indoor air quality and has the ability to absorb the airborne dust and allergens, even the particles and pollen, coming from outside. So the regular carpet cleaning has a bigger impact on our lives than we have expected before this revolutionary theory.


Another interesting fact for the carpet maintaining… I know from experience it’s quite time consuming and challenging to try and clean your own carpet. But hey, youtube to the rescue. You can go to the website and find almost anything – advice, how, what not to, etc. etc. It’s quite overwhelming to be honest. For those of you who think they can do a great job washing your carpets and rugs, here is a short video that can give you some ideas.

For everybody else I think a professional carpet technician is the safest bet. Not only they will clean, rinse and dry your carpet but they will do it in the safest possible way. Eliminating risks in life, simple solutions = happiness. What more can one ask for 🙂

Innovative Carpet Cleaning Technology