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Daily Wear & Washing Tips

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Basic Practical Tips for Daily Care

Preventative Maintenance:

When you get ready to do the wash:

To set your water temperature, we usually use cool to mild water for natural fibers (linen, cotton and silk) and warm to hot water for synthetic fabrics and blends.  The variations on this rule depend on whether there are stains you're trying to remove, and whether the dye of the fabric runs in warmer water.

Before placing garments in the washer, make sure they are washable in water!  Some garments shrink or their dyes bleed if they're washed in water, especially warm or hot water.  These garments must be dry cleaned.

Washable fabrics include:

Sometimes washable fabrics include:

Dry cleanable fabrics include:

Special care fabrics/trims include:

If you're washing knits or loose weaves, be careful that they will not be snagged by other garments' hooks, eyes, or zippers.  These types of garments are usually dried flat instead of machine dried.  This will keep pilling and worn appearance to a minimum, and it will allow you to re-shape the garment before it dries.

If you're washing a garment you've never washed before, test a hidden seam using the water temperature you think it will use.  Let a dot of water dry.  Watch for puckers around the area, which indicate that the fabric will shrink if submerged.  Watch for running dyes.  If either happens, do not wash the garment.

If you're washing a garment with stains, pre-treating often makes the difference between success and failure in terms of removing stains.  See our advice on removing stains for more details.  Also - any heat applied to the stained area may set the stain.  Do not dry it in a dryer or apply an iron or steamer, unless the stains are something you can live with.  If you want to remove the stain with the wash, inspect it after washing, before tossing it in the dryer.  This is a wise step to take before drying anything, since bleeding dyes or deposits of excess soap can be made permanent if they're not caught first.

After washing:

Minimize wrinkles by hanging your garments immediately.  Using padded hangers is not a luxury, it's a necessity for vintage garments.  They will benefit because the point of stress at the shoulder is not concentrated as it would be with a thin wire hanger.  Wire hangers also rust, which is an easily avoided dilemma.  Use plastic hangers if not enough padded ones are available.

Press your garments according to the type of fiber that they're made of.  It's nearly always best to press the wrong side of the fabric (i.e. turn it inside out and press).  If you use steam in your iron, make sure the water is fresh.  You can use a mist bottle instead.  Don't add starches to vintage garments unless you'll be wearing and washing them soon.

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To hand wash a garment, the same rules apply as far as water temperature and preparation of fabrics.  The differences are that you'll be the mixer and the agitator, instead of the washing machine.  Here are the steps we use:

Most of these steps are common sense, but it's easy to make a mistake, even if you have experience.  Usually we find that it's common to put too much detergent in the water, to leave too much detergent in the garment, to scrub and agitate too roughly.  Be observant and use your sensibility to keep your garments in an improved condition after they're washed.

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Choosing a dry cleaner is not usually difficult when you're cleaning regular clothing, but for vintage clothing it can be a more involved process.  Cleaning a 1970s wool dress isn't usually a challenge for a dry cleaner, but cleaning a silk Victorian bodice is usually complicated.  Here are the tips we recommend for finding a caring cleaner:

Tips & Advice from Customer Emails: Help with Regular Cleaning

In This Section...
-Cleaning Silk - How do I do it, and will dry cleaning be okay?
-Removing Pills - Can it be done, and how do I prevent it?

Q: I have a Pucci silk blouse that needs cleaning. Do you have any recommendations as far as dry cleaning? If I dry clean by hand, are there any products on the market you like? I realize my mileage will vary, esp. as I don't know what caused the stains, but they are barely visible and very small.

A: You wrote that you need info on dry cleaning a silk Pucci blouse. The first detail I need to say is that sometimes silk is washable. It depends on the weave and the dyes used. I would first do a test on a hidden seam, once with a drop of water, and a second test with a drop of dry cleaning fluid. Don't ever mix the two - do them separately. You may find that one or the other makes the dyes bleed (but usually not both). Keep a white towel or cotton fabric scrap underneath to watch for running dye.

If the water drop is okay, also check it for shrinkage. Silk won't shrink noticeably, unless it's a true crepe weave, which it probably isn't in a Pucci blouse. You also should be careful in washing or dry cleaning any silk with gums in it, or that has chemical finishes. These are hard to distinguish unless you know fabric well. If you do see any puckering around the water drop's placement, you know it will shrink.

Now to your real question! ;) If you take the blouse to a commercial dry cleaner, let them know its value and ask what insurance they have available, if any. You normally get what you pay for with dry cleaners, so take it to one with in-house cleaning (who doesn't truck the clothes to a plant), and one who you trust. If you decide to dry clean at home, you'll need to search out the fluid first. Some states will not sell dry cleaning fluid because of environmental law. We get ours from a local chain of hardware stores. The fluid itself is by Sunnyside and called "Carbo-Sol", and costs about $9.50 a quart.

There are other products on the market that are not the same process as a true dry cleaning. The home dry cleaning kits that you put in your dryer (like Dryel) do -not- dry clean the garment. They are meant as a occasional substitute, not an equivalent. Also, there are other products in hardware stores called "degreasers" that are soap based, and not really a dry cleaning fluid. The real fluid you're looking for will evaporate on its own, with no residue left in the garment.

If you know the fabric is not going to bleed, you can basically fill a sink with a shallow pool of fluid, dip the blouse, and lay it on a clean white towel or a padded muslin sheet. When it's dry, air it out on a porch or breezy space. Be sure to use lots of ventilation, and seal off the room tightly, since the fumes are toxic. Read the packaging to get all the details. I hope this helps!

Q: Hi. How do you remove pilling on cotton/polyester knits? I have some terrific clothing that I spent a lot on, and now they look terrible. I have searched the web and only found your sight to ask. I appreciate your feed back. Thanks.

A: Regarding your question on pill removal, have you tried finding a battery-powered pill remover? They are little hand-held gadgets that have a metal head that cuts pills at the base, kind of like a man's electric razor, but designed differently. I know we've bought them at Wal-Mart and Target. They are useful and inexpensive, but cheaply made (they don't last very long).

To prevent the pills, I'd suggest using a gentle cycle on the wash (instead of the normal cycle), turn the items inside out before washing, and if possible, line dry instead of tumbling them dry. You can even hang everything on plastic hangers, and set the clothing in the garage, on a porch or in a bathroom to dry. Pills happen because of abrasion to the fabric surface. The less abrasion you give the fabric, the better it will look. I hope this helps!

Also see Save Your Sweaters!  How To Prevent Pilling & Pulling




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