Saturday, April 2, 2011

Dry cleaning - a pet peeve

One of my pet peeve when it comes to clothing is Dry Cleaning. I have thrifted wool, cotton, wool mix, cotton mix clothing that says Dry Clean only on the labels. Why? These items were not like big wool coats that requires special handling. I have machine washed (cold cycle) almost all my clothing (wool, cotton, silk, beaded, embroidered, etc) and have no problems so far. With some delicate materials, I simply put them in a plain cotton pillowcase before putting them in the washer. I hung them to dry and they turned out fine. I hope my 'good luck' with laundering at home will continue without me spending a fortune on dry cleaning.

I once dry-cleaned a light colour linen suit and the dry cleaner actually ruined it. Somehow it came back with blotches of discolouration. I was not pleased. They offered to clean it again for free but the blotches remained. Since then, I decided to launder my clothing at home.

What do you think about dry cleaning? Do you have any tales to tell?

6 comments:

  1. I've had good luck washing dry-clean only items by hand, but occasionally something will shrink when I do it, so approach with caution. It's very frustrating when that happens.

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  2. I agree with you. I have a few pieces of clothing that shrunk because I forgot to tell hubby not to put them in the dryer. But they didn't go to waste. I simply refashion them into something wearable for my son or myself. You can see them in my posts labeled 'refashion'.

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  3. I absolutely wash some dry-cleaning-only items I know of (those that come to me with their laundry labels still intact), even some silk clothes and even on the warm, non-delicate cycle - it doesn't seem to harm them much. I wouldn't dare put them in the dryer, but I have the impression US dryers are gentler on the laundry than German dryers :) I have an off-white dry-cleaning-only suit lying around that needs some cleaning and that I haven't dared to wash, but maybe I'll give it a try now! It can't get worse than the curry stains it currently has, and if it does, I'll dye it dark green or navy blue.

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  4. Hi poet! Have you tried washing the curry stains by hand? I do know that if I have food stains on my clothes I need to get it rinsed right away. If I wait a day or longer, the stain will be almost impossible to get rid of.

    I have also dyed clothes into another colour because of stains too! :-) However, grease stains seem to be the most stubborn. Even when I dyed the garment black, I could still see the grease stains (a bit darker). So it ended up in the Refashion pile......

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  5. For grease stains, I use Fels Naphtha or Lestoil. Supposedly Wisk would work, but in reality it takes a lot of washings.

    Lots of manufacturers slap a Dry Clean Only Label on things that can be washed with care. I have successfully washed rayon and silk,but they cannot go through the dryer without turning to wrinkled things that need lots of mist and steam iron treatment.

    I also handwash wool. You can do it in warm water; all you need to do is avoid temperature changes --cold to hot or vice versa. When the stain has been there for years, I use cold water only. I rescued a suit with multiple stains. It turned out well enough to be a Christmas gift. (For more about the suit, see my post at http:indeliblemouse.blogspot.com)

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  6. Thanks for the tip TC! I will give your grease stain method a try!

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