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    What you may not know about doing laundry

    By Sarah Stebbins

    Clothing and Outerwear

    Button-Down Shirts.

    Unbutton the shirt.
    Unfasten all buttons, including the tiny ones at the collar, before laundering. Otherwise, the agitation in the machine and the weight of other garments may cause buttonholes to tear.

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    Apply a stain remover. It's a good idea to pretreat collars every time you wash them. "Once stains from body oils build up, they are very difficult to remove," says Chris Allsbrooks, a textile analyst at the Drycleaning & Laundry Institute, in Laurel, Maryland. Use a stain remover or spot-clean with a mixture of water and liquid detergent. Pour it over the area, then rub with a soft toothbrush. It's especially important to spot-clean permanent-press shirts and other items that have been treated with resins so they retain their shape, because these fabrics tend to hold soiling.

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    Use the permanent-press setting. Wash permanent-press shirts with all-purpose detergent on the permanent-press setting, which is gentler than the regular one, uses warm or hot water, and has a long cool-down rinse to further minimize wrinkling. Opt for the dryer's permanent-press feature, which has a cool-down period at the end. Wash non-permanent-press shirts on the regular cycle in cold or warm water.

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    Sweaters

    Wash cotton blends on gentle.
    Many knits made of cotton, synthetics, or blends can be machine-washed in cold or warm water on the gentle cycle with all-purpose or mild detergent. To combat wrinkles and stiffness, dry items on low for 5 to 10 minutes before laying them flat on a mesh sweater rack or a towel.

    Use a zippered pillowcase for delicates.
    Place a wool, cashmere, or fine cotton sweater in a zippered pillowcase; wash on the delicate cycle with cold water and lay flat to dry.

    Test silk sweaters for colorfastness. Delicate knits, like crochet and silk, are a different story: Dry-clean these, or test for colorfastness (to see if the color will bleed, place a dab of detergent on a dip a cotton swab in detergent and hold it on the fabric for two minutes) and hand-wash in cold water with mild detergent. Some knits may stretch out; reshape after washing and lay flat to dry.

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    Socks


    Never lose a sock again. One of the most frustrating aspects of doing laundry is the number of socks that suspiciously go missing. Forget putting out an APB: Simply pin each pair together before throwing it in the machine. No sorting, no matching necessary afterward.

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    Jeans

    Wash jeans in cold water.
    Most denim is top-dyed, meaning only the surface of the fibers is colored. To keep jeans from fading or acquiring white streaks, wash in small loads in cold water (with more water than clothes) with all-purpose detergent. This cuts down on abrasion, says Allsbrooks.

    Stretch the legs to prevent shrinkage.
    "It's common for jeans to shrink in length" when washed, says Steve Boorstein, author of The Clothing Doctor's 99 Secrets to Clothing Care (Fashion Media Group, $5, amazon.com). Hold them by the waistband and legs and gently stretch them vertically before drying. Dry on low or medium heat; overdrying causes unnecessary wear and tear, so take jeans out when the legs are done but the seams and the waistband are slightly damp.

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    Hats and Gloves

    Wash knit hats and gloves like sweaters.
    Follow the same instructions based on different fabric types. Cotton blends can be machine-washed cold on delicates, wool and cashmere on the delicate cycle with cold water, and so on.

    Spot-clean structured hats.
    Newsboy and baseball caps could become misshapen so its best to keep them out of the washing machine.

    Hand-wash leather-trimmed gloves.
    You can hand-wash gloves with small sections of leather if the leather is the same color as the knit; otherwise bleeding may be a problem. To dry, insert the handle of a wooden spoon in one finger and set the spoon end in a vase. This will help the glove retain its shape.

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    Down and Polyester Coats

    Wash adult coats in warm water.
    You can wash down coats in front-loading machines with a mild powder detergent and warm water on the gentle cycle. (If you have a top-loader, take these coats to a dry cleaner; most top-loaders have agitators that can compress and displace down filling and prevent pieces from tumbling freely.)

    Use towels for speed drying.
    Smaller items, like children's jackets, whether filled with down or polyester, can go in a front- or top-loader on the gentle cycle; tumble dry on low. Put a few clean, dry towels in the dryer to help soak excess moisture and speed drying.

    Read the Rest: How to Do Laundry

    Don't Miss
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    Surprising Uses for Your Dishwasher
    A Guide to Cleaning Household Surfaces

    Images: John Gruen

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    127 comments

    • E.L  •  8 months ago
      Fact: Clothes dryers (and washers too) differ from one to another in heat and how hard they treat laundered items.
      Fact: Some neighborhoods do not allow clothes to be hung on lines outdoors.
      Fact: These articles may not always be fully correct, but they do generate a lot of information from the readers which may provide a great deal of help.
      Fact: If I put a damp towel in my dryer with a wrinkled shirt, result occasionally is a wrinkled shirt and a wrinkled towel.
    • Sheelah N  •  9 months ago
      Avoid the dryer... it is your clothes worse enemy. I'm pretty meticulous about my family's clothes, and there is nothing more I hate is shrunken, faded & pilling clothes, especially after I put a lot of money into them. I try to air dry whenever possible and still use the iron to make them crisp and new. Safety pins in the wash is a bad idea.
    • Sheelah N  •  9 months ago
      As for socks... I buy the same kind/brand ALL THE TIME. My husband gets one kind and me and my 16 year old get the same... why? When one turns up missing, you never have to look for its "match" Just open the drawer and grab 2. Life is too short to be hunting down socks.
    • Habanero♥™  •  9 months ago
      I have a mess bag that I put the socks into after wearing. I wash and dry them in the bad. End of lost socks.
    • RIGHT TURN ONLY  •  9 months ago
      In the navy we tied our sock to our belt loops.
    • Coach  •  9 months ago
      In order to save time and/or eliminate your ironing of some "cotton" and
      mix fabric pull-overs/turtle-necks, you may want to ADD MORE (3x the usual amount) liquid fabric softener to the Final-Rinse cycle of your washing. This will go a long way to improve your drying, greatly smooth-out most fabrics, and makes your cloths smell nice, after your
      dryer's done! The concentrated fabric softeners worked the best.

      Coach.
    • SylvesterS  •  9 months ago
      For washing down coats, use only specialized down soap, not just any powdered soap.
      Down soap is formulated to rinse leaving no soap residue, and leaves the down at the proper acid balance. It is worth the modest cost to keep your down from going flat prematurely.
      Don't worry about using a top loader either for jackets. Bags or pillows no, but if down shifts in a jacket it should go back to the manufacturer for warranty. It should not happen.
    • Christi  •  9 months ago
      lol, like i'm going to take the time to pin every sock together. matching them would take way less time i'm sorry.
    • Leslie S  •  9 months ago
      A laundry tip I learned a long time ago that has been helpful with keeping the collars from curling up at the corners of the three button golf or polo style shirts is to remove them from the dryer (if using the dryer at all), is to hang them up while the collars are still damp & DO NOT fold the collar down. When you get ready to wear the shirt the collars won't curl up at the edges and won't neer to be ironed down.
    • stevec  •  9 months ago
      won't sox dissapear by the pair now that you've pinned them together?
    • hulagirlz  •  9 months ago
      dollar stores sell laundry bags that are mesh. they are probably for hauling your dirty clothes, but i use them to 'bag' clothing that may pill or need a little protection form agitation. they about $2. don't throw them in the dryer or you'll damage the cord locks!!
    • DW  •  9 months ago
      bla bla blka blka bla bla b ka jnmla
    • yahoo sucks  •  9 months ago
      more stupidity. only old ladies pin their socks together, and who likes pinholes in stuff, they get bigger every time you wash. another bullcrap article from someone that obviously doesnt do laundry much. i match socks coming out of dryer, why would i pin them like some old cootie?????
      STUPID YAHOO ARTICLE AGAIN
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 months ago
      WHAT A STUPID IDEA TO TAKE THE TIME TO 'PIN TOGETHER' EACH PAIR OF SOCKS. DO WE NOW HAVE ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD TO DEVOTE TO LAUNDRY? I USE NET BAGS REGULARLY. ITS SO EASY TO THROW THE SMALL DELICATES INTO!
    • b  •  9 months ago
      Great advice it you live alone! This person obviously has too much time on her hands and is definitely not a mom! what a ridulous article...
    • Katte B  •  9 months ago
      Unbelievable! The article is so full of misleading, distructive and down right wrong "tips". Where do you get these "experts"???
    • Marlene K  •  9 months ago
      What is this "lost sock" issue everyone keeps talking about? I don't know this issue. ARe you sure all the socks are in the laundry before you wash? All kidding aside, this article is dumb.
    • Debbie  •  9 months ago
      Net bags rock. I wash panty hose in them and then dry them on a line. I also use them for bras, bathrobe ties...anything that could tangle up and keep my clothes from getting clean. On a different note...

      JoanW sounds like a bitter old you-know-what.
    • Debbie  •  9 months ago
      Dish soap is great for removing grease spots. -it would probably work with collar ring too. Net bags are essential for busy working laundry-doers. Cashmere comes out okay in the wash if you're super-careful and you can wash silk in a net bag on delicate and iron it while its still wet. (sometimes. use caution)
    • Debbie  •  9 months ago
      Does no one understand they need create "filler" articles on these sites just to have something to post? I don't know why I keep thinking there will be something that I don't know - hasn't happened yet. Bye Bye