EliteLux

Vans mary janes cleaning guide – simple steps to keep your shoes fresh!

Alright, so today I decided to tackle cleaning my nasty Vans Mary Janes. These things have been through everything – muddy walks, coffee spills, you name it. Felt like walking in dirty sponges, seriously.

Vans mary janes cleaning guide – simple steps to keep your shoes fresh!

Digging Out the Supplies

First, I hunted around the house for basic stuff. Snagged an old toothbrush that wasn’t totally gross, a couple microfiber cloths I use for cleaning glasses, mild dish soap, some white vinegar, a bowl of warm water, and an old towel. Almost used my good bath towel but caught myself – crisis avoided.

Prepping the Shoes

Yanked out the laces and tossed ’em in a soapy water bucket to soak. Then I wiped off the loose dirt with a dry cloth. Seriously, chunks of mud just flaked off onto my floor. Whoops.

Scrub Time

Mixed a tiny splash of dish soap into the warm water. Dunked the toothbrush in and went at the canvas. Used small circles like I was polishing a bike chain. Focused on the toe cap and sides where stains looked like they were celebrating. Didn’t soak the shoe completely – just made sure it was damp.

Rinsing & Drying

Wiped off all soap with a clean, damp microfiber cloth. Didn’t dunk ’em under the tap – learned that lesson when my last pair took 3 days to dry indoors. Stuff the toes with crumpled paper towels to keep the shape. Laid them sideways on the old towel away from direct sun or heat. My cat tried to sit on one. Typical.

Final Result

Checked them after 24 hours – totally dry and way fresher. No funky smells, stains mostly gone except one shadow near the heel that’s probably permanent now. Laces came clean too after a rinse. Not brand-new shiny, but like they earned their life back. Threw them back into rotation today with clean socks. Worth the hour of fussing for sure.

Exit mobile version