Internets say hot for white, warm for lights and cold for darks. I cannot see the logic there, but ok. So what's hot, warm and cold? like, what temperature?
Should underwear be washed at a higher temp?
What do I do with jeans?
Or that. Preferably someones mom. They have a godly skillsjord wrote:
I dno get a woman to come round.
Last edited by max (2010-09-24 03:15:36)
Ultra's Basic clothes washing for dummies:
-Separate coloured and whites, be it sheets or not.
-Check the washer/dryer that there aren't any clothes left from the last user to fuck up your washing result
-Double check the colours you toss in the washer and dryer
-Clothes 30-40c
-Sheets n' towels 60c (check the labels for the temperature. some don't like 60c)
-If you do much sporting and/or have flexible things, like tracksuits, swimming pants or similar, do not use softener. It'll kill the stretchy out of them.
-When tumble drying sheets. Check in the dryer every 30min or so, that they're not in a huge pile. They won't get dry on the inside at all. Mess the sheets up and turn the dryer back on.
-If you wash at a public place with hot women among you, you go ask for assistance so they can check that you have done everything right, mkay? And if you get laid as a bonus, remember that 50% of it goes to me... wait wat?
Protip. If you have clothes that are otherways clean, but reek of cigs and you have to have the clothes on for tonights woman hunt do the following. Throw them into the dryer for a 10min with a piece of these dryer aroma paper sheets (or whatever they're called) you get from any store. Just look for some dryer stuff on the shelf. They don't cost much but they are a life saver somethimes since hanging the shirt outside just won't get rid of all the stench even in a night or two.
Last edited by PrivateVendetta (2010-09-24 04:52:31)
Put in with rest of whites. low tempJenspm wrote:
What do I do with (white) dress shirts? There is no washing-tag on it.
Greys can go with darks tbh, as long as nothing is brand newJenspm wrote:
I've so far sorted into - whites, greys, darks
Fuck that. 40 or less. No need for any of that hot shitJenspm wrote:
correct, yes? I'm guessing I can do 60c on the first two, and 40c on the last.
Might as well. So long as nothing is brand new you'll defo be okJenspm wrote:
Can I put a light blue shirt with the darks?
Match colours, dont worry about whether they're t-shirts or underwear or w/eJenspm wrote:
Do I just throw the underwear in with the t-shirts?
Don't even botherJenspm wrote:
Do I use white or colour bleach for the greys?
If it's cotton it's okay to wash with the rest of the whites, some shirts don't tumble dry very well so if you do that pull it out before it is dry and hang it up with a coat hanger to dry the rest ... looks way better and there is a small chance you don't have to iron itJenspm wrote:
lol did I say bleach?
I meant detergent.
the shirt is cotton
Last edited by Trotskygrad (2010-09-24 06:29:55)
I'd only wash white cotton towels, bedsheets and underwear at 95°C, but not outer wear, as colors fade much more quickly and the fabric and shape gets affected.max wrote:
White cotton clothes (underwear, tshirts, towels, etc.) at 95°C. Everything else (jeans, anything with color) at 60°C. You could wash 'em at 95°C too, but the colors will wear out faster. New clothes can leak colors, so don't throw in your brand new red shirt with your white underwear unless you really love pink.
Environmentalists will tell you that 40°C or even 30°C is enough, but they're commies. Hot = clean, stainless, hygienic awesomeness.
Yep, cold wash with liquid laundry detergent.max wrote:
Oh and don't touch any plastic girly clothes. You'll ruin them.
As does silk.max wrote:
Wool has it's own program and detergent.
I only use extra rinse if I used extra detergent on extra dirty clothes...Dilbert_X wrote:
With modern washing detergent, just wash everything at medium and it'll be fine, but keep whites separate.
Pro-tip:
If its a top-loader let it fill with water, add the powder, let it agitate a little then add your clothes.
If its a front-loader use liquid detergent if possible.
^ Prevents lumps of un-dissolved powder remaining in your clothes and causing irritation, and means the powder gets better dissolved and cleans more effectively.
An additional cold rinse costs next to nothing and ensures there's no soap residue - helpful if you have easily irritated skin.