Laundry and its types

By adminblog

How to do laundry?

It may all seem like rocket science to you, but certainly, it is not. Here are 10 simple steps for better laundry:
First, check the labels for washing instructions and remove any objects from your pockets. Next, separate clothes into whites and darks to prevent your whites from discoloring. Laundry needs your attention.
If your clothes have stains, treat them. Now, fill the washer only ¾ of the way full to ensure a better wash.
Add detergent – don’t overfill, and if using Pods, put directly in the drum.
Select your temperature. Use hot for whites and cold for colors.
And, now you can start the machine.
Put your clothes into the dryer and select desired settings. Take clothes out of the dryer to prevent wrinkling. You can hang or fold clothes. That’s all there’s to it. Laundry of different fabrics. We asked home-efficiency expert Cynthia Townley Ewer the author of House works, to explain the secret of cleaning and caring for today’s most popular clothing fabrics.

Acetate: Hand Wash — Air Dry

To create beautifully, easy-to-drape clothing Acetate is a man-made fiber, often found blended with other fibers. They clean up well, but they can be very sensitive to dye transfer. Check the care label, and then wash garments containing acetate fibers in cold water. By twisting, wringing, or heat Acetate can be damaged. Hand wash acetate blends or use the gentle cycle of the washer for machine-washable garments.
Iron garments containing acetate using a low-heat setting. Press on the wrong side and use a press cloth to avoid shine and preserve the beauty of the fabric.

Cotton: Hot Water Wash — Tumble Dry Warm

Cotton is a worldwide favorite for comfortable, versatile clothing. It can be found in garments as casual as a T-shirt or as elaborate as a ball gown.
The fabric has been preshrunk or processed unless the Cotton fibers will shrink. “Coldwater only” may signal that your ankle-length cotton trousers will convert themselves to capri pants if not washed correctly.
Cotton items that are preshrunk may be washed in hot, warm, or cold water, depending on the color of the garment and the care label recommendations.

If care labels agree, add chlorine bleach to white cotton wash loads to remove stains; colored cotton may be brightened by non-chlorine bleach formulated for colored clothing. Cold-water washing will protect the deep color of cotton jeans and preserve the pep of brightly colored Hawaiian shirts. Over drying cotton will encourage shrinkage; dry cotton garments at a lower heat and remove them from the dryer while still fairly cool.

Linen: Cool Water Wash — Air Dry

Linen is a natural fiber, made from the flax plant. Check care labels on linen garments to determine whether the garment must be dry-cleaned. If machine-washable, wash according to label instructions, using water appropriate to the garment’s color. Linen absorbs more water during the washing process than other fibers, so guard against overcrowding in the washer and dryer. Iron linen from the inside out, using steam at a hot iron setting.

Polyester: Cool Water Wash — Tumble Dry Warm or Air Dry

The last century’s “wonder fiber,” polyester creates colorful, durable, easy-care garments. Most polyester fabrics may be machine-washed using warm water, but check care labels first. Tumble dry polyester garments on low heat. Remove them from the dryer while they’re still slightly damp to prevent wrinkles and avoid a static buildup. Use a low heat: Polyester will melt beneath a hot iron.

Silk: Hand Wash or Cool Warm Wash

Tumble Dry Cool or Air Dry Supple, strong and lustrous, this natural fiber is among the world’s oldest clothing materials. While silk fiber itself is washable, many weave patterns used for silk fabric will tighten or pucker if washed, and deep dye tones may not be color-fast. Let garment labels guide you when cleaning silk garments. “Dry-clean only” signals a fabric or construction that will not survive washing. Launder washable silk garments using products formulated for hand washing or delicate fabrics. Mild baby shampoo (without conditioning additives that may add wax or oils) is a good choice for hand-washable silk fabrics. It will clean the natural protein and revitalize the fiber. Never tumble silk in the dryer. Instead, roll the item in a towel to press out moisture, and then hang to dry. Press silk garments with a warm iron.

Spandex: Hand Wash — Air Dry

A touch of stretch makes clothing fit and feel better. Enter spandex, an elastic fiber now incorporated in small amounts in many types of fabric to add stretch and comfort. While spandex is hand- or machine-washable, avoid hot water and chlorine bleach. Both will damage the spandex fibers. Unless care labels provide otherwise, hang spandex garments to dry, and
avoid machine drying. The heat of the dryer can cause some spandex-blends to pucker or bubble. If ironing is necessary, press the item quickly with a warm iron.

Wool: Hand Wash — Air Dry

Sheep love it, and we do, too: the soft, warm fiber made from wool. Naturally insulating and easy to dye, wool fabric runs the gamut from rugged tweeds to floating wool challis. In the natural state, wool is washable, but because many wool garments incorporate
construction methods that cannot be washed, dry-clean wool clothing where the label requires. If washable, use a gentle detergent and hand wash or machine-wash as directed by the clothing care label.
A tip from a venerable Shetland Islands’ knitter: Wash and rinse wool fibers in lukewarm water. Using cold water to rinse can cause shrinkage when it comes to wool.

Daily Laundry will not let your fashion down!!