Care For Your (Denim/ Wool/ Cotton)
-
imo a wash isn´t a factor to make a jeans look darker or lighter…indigo fades with wear, so wear is what decides if you gonna end up with a darker or a lighter pair of denim...a wash just washes out the indigo which is faded or "lost" anyways...
Rafa speaketh the truth.
On a rope dyed yarn, the indigo is oxidised onto the yarn. Abrasion rubs the oxidisation off and reveals the white inner core. The indigo does not penetrate the core of the yarn in rope dying as the yarn goes through the indigo baths under tension….
-
Thanks for the interesting insight into rope dyed yarn. I guess that explains the beautiful patina on a pair of well worn jeans. All surface action so it makes sense. Are there any processes where indigo is dyed deep into the core of the yarn?
Personally, when setting forth for the first time with grown up jeans
i got a bit obsessive about the not washing them thing as i believed it to be fundamental to the whole experience. Now that i've got a few pairs under me belt - awful pun not intended - i just give them 3 months or so and when they start to stink they go in the washing machine and this works just great for me.
-
Muchos gracias
-
guys who wash in the machine, do you find that the spin cycle adds a crease parallel to the selvedge that is a bit tricky to get out? I did this once, and that crease is still there. Unfortunately, the machines in my apartment complex dont have a no-spin cycle option…
-
I washed my Busters at the weekend and the jeans went through a spin by accident (I'm still getting to grips with the machine in my new flat). It didn't have any adverse effect and the jeans dried a lot quicker than when I've pulled them out before a spin. I think it's usually the combo of heat and spinning that puts hard creases in. I used a wool wash option, which is kinder on garments, and also threw in my IHSH-16 and 55.
-
hmph…I just toss them into the machine...usually normal 40°C cycle, sometimes might do even 60°C. Spin at highest
No special laundry detergent, (Bonners ain't available here I think) also there is or isn't softener or whatever that is called...
No creases...They are just jeans
-
I've washed my 21oz Samurai and my 18oz Busters monthly, and in the machine with VERY different results. Denim is an organic fabric, so trying to predict what effect a wash will have on it is like trying to predict how the tide effects the coastline…it varies.
-
trying to predict what effect a wash will have on it is like trying to predict how the tide effects the coastline…it varies.
Holy shit man, that's pretty deep and poetic.
-
I wish I could say I had been drinking :o
-
hmph…I just toss them into the machine...usually normal 40°C cycle, sometimes might do even 60°C. Spin at highest
No special laundry detergent, (Bonners ain't available here I think) also there is or isn't softener or whatever that is called...
No creases...They are just jeans
Pretty sure cowboys in 1875 didn't wash there jeans much. They are just jeans though.
-
I doubt those cowboys smelt all that good either though.
-
well…
different stroke for different folks. IF you wanna smell like an asswipe, go ahead and do as you please...
and don't blöame me if you don't get pussyand speaking about it....Seul how do you treat a sick pussy...I mean c'mon they're just jeans...and you do manual labor....LOL
-
Well yeah true enough, Jack, but I want to wear these jeans as long as possible… A wash on a delicate cycle'll still get them clean, and is better for them... A 60C° wash at 1400 fucking RPM isn't my idea of taking care of my clothes at all...
We'll have to agree to disagree here
I do NOT wear smelly clothes though... But as Doug said: the owner of smelly clothes is most likely not aware of it... I'll ask a collegue soon