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wwwhizz | 4 years ago

I ended up washing everything on 40 degrees and throwing everything in the dryer. Works just fine.

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cmrdporcupine|4 years ago

I noticed a huge difference in how long my clothing lasts once I switched to hang-drying most things. It's not that huge of a hassle and saves energy and I don't have to buy clothes as often. I started doing a lot more hang drying after I bought a bunch of merino wool base layers I use for skiing (which can't really be machine dried).

hinkley|4 years ago

If you look near the laundry baskets at any home or department store, you'll find comically large 'lingeree bags'. Turns out running anything with a fine weave through these - satin, rayon, exercise clothing, high TPI pillow cases - not only makes them last longer but also prevents pilling.

Always button and zip your jeans, and if you're not in a hurry, cotton clothing seems to be less worn by friction in the dryer than by the high heat. I run a lot of my cotton knits through twice on permanent press instead of once on cotton. And I don't use dryer sheets. Dryer sheets keep your clothes from getting static cling when you have over-dried them, but over-drying them damages them. The static cling is a symptom that you shouldn't ignore.

What you want to do is pull your clothes out when there is just a hint of moisture in them. The air and the latent heat should be more than enough to suck out that last hint of dampness. And if one towel or pair of pants is still damp, nothing stops you from running them by themselves for a couple minutes while you fold the rest.

c0nsumer|4 years ago

I do this for cycling clothing. (Almost all synthetic, some wool, fair amount of spandex-y stuff.)

This stuff lasts forever when washed on cool/warm and then hung.

Friends of mine have complained about one brand or another not lasting very long, but they've been tossing the stuff in the drier.

We're fortunate to have a basement with a nice beam I can place hangers on (for winter drying), or a hanging bar I fitted in the garage (for summer). Lately I've been getting rid of 8-10 year old stuff that I no longer like or no longer fits, and it's sellable, as opposed to just worn out.

(Doesn't sell for much, but folks will happily pay $20 - $30 for special print cycling jerseys that are still in good shape and cost $80-130 new. Way better than tossing them in the trash.)

tuatoru|4 years ago

If hang-drying outside, turn your stuff inside out.

UV from the sun kills bacteria, and you want that on the side near your skin, and as a bonus the inside fades (UV again) but the outside doesn't. I have some t-shirts that are quite faded on the inside but still reasonable on the outside.

zmix|4 years ago

...and should be washed as little as possible!

wolverine876|4 years ago

I assume you mean 40 C, not 40 F? I started washing everything on cold (my washer actually has a 'Tap Cold' setting - just tap water) and it works just as well. I encourage everyone to just try it once - it won't hurt anything and you can always re-run the load - and you will never go back. Also, you don't have to sort clothes.

I read in some credible, non-technical publication, I think the NYT or WSJ, an interview with a engineer in that field (something like detergents or washing machines) who said that detergents used to need heat to enhance the chemical reaction, but that it's no longer true and cold water works just as well.

EDIT: Does anyone know a good technical, authoritative resource on laundry? Consumer Reports has well-researched info, but not in the depth I'd like.

aasasd|4 years ago

I'm quite sure that plenty of bacteria don't die at 40°, let alone ‘tap cold’.

toyg|4 years ago

Ish. Dryers can literally melt heavily-synthetic clothes. Been there, done that.

bluGill|4 years ago

Turn the temperature down. You shouldn't dry anything that hot, it just wastes energy.

scotty79|4 years ago

Hey. If it melts it melts. Only survivors get to be worn.

Aloha|4 years ago

I generally avoid any synthetic that is not a cotton blend, I want to be able to was on hot and dry on bake.

NullPrefix|4 years ago

Condescending tip - synthetics are for engine oils, not clothes ;)

patentatt|4 years ago

Yup, I’ve never once in my life paid any attention to any of this, and I only ruined one sweater once. My wife was not happy, it was a brand new cashmere sweater from some brand name. Still though, if that’s my only screw up and amortized over a lifetime of not caring about this, still positive ROI for me. Twist ending: we saved the severely shrunken fancy sweater and now it fits my kids, so not a total loss.

dayre|4 years ago

This has been my experience as well. They should simplify these to just TEXTILE CARE SYMBOL CASHMERE SWEATER and TEXTILE CARE SYMBOL EVERYTHING ELSE.

m_eiman|4 years ago

If you wash the sweater in conditioner and lukewarm water you can (carefully) pull it into its original shape. #lifehack

securingsincity|4 years ago

a cashmere sweater shrunk to a child's size will change your mind about that approach

falcor84|4 years ago

Well, my approach is to limit my day-to-day clothes buying to just those washable in 40°C and machine dryable. Makes both the shopping and life overall so much easier.

mikepurvis|4 years ago

My rule of thumb is basically just to exclude from the dryer anything stretchy, slippery, knitted, or lacy. With that stuff hung to dry, what’s left is all the plain cotton shirts and jeans that can take whatever you throw at them.

awwaiid|4 years ago

Survival of the fittest! Hahaha

ewindal|4 years ago

Gotta wash on 60 sometimes too, though. Otherwise your t-shirts are going to become subtly smelly over time.

scotty79|4 years ago

If you have dryer it nearly strilizes everything you just washed with hot air.

I'm washing t-shirts in 40 deg and drying them in my washing machine with built-in dryer.

They come out a bit damp to avoid creasing too much. I never had them smell even though I was just unloading dryer into a huge pile of damp clothes and leaving them like that for a day or two to dry out completely. I even forgot to take them out of the washing mashine and found out few days later. They were still damp but didn't smell. I washed and dried them again though to be on the safe side.

fomine3|4 years ago

Most washers (especially top loading) in Japan don't support warming water so people wash with cold water, use hot bath water, or hopefully the house has hot water faucet for washer.

I've bought an expensive front loading washer-dryer with water heater (upto 60C) and heat pump dryer recently. Now I always wash with at least 15C water, even 15C, it's significant difference in cold winter situation.

gardaani|4 years ago

Underwear should be washed on 60 degrees to prevent any germs spreading.

shawnz|4 years ago

I have seen mixed evidence about hot water being more effective than cold water when washing. Do you have a reputable source?

amanaplanacanal|4 years ago

Does the detergent not sterilize everything?

brylie|4 years ago

Do you have any wool or linen items?