Photo by Ty Mecham
It's here: Our game-changing guide to everyone's favorite room in the house. Your Do-Anything Kitchen gathers the smartest ideas and savviest tricks—from our community, test kitchen, and cooks we love—to help transform your space into its best self.
Grab your copyPopular on Food52
73 Comments
catalinalacruz
May 4, 2023
I don't own a clothes dryer, since I live in a place where I can dry laundry on the line all year. But this prevents me from washing puff jackets or anything down-filled, as a dryer with a tennis ball seems to be the way to dry these items. Any ideas for a workaround?
Pattiallen
February 20, 2021
I have a long wool coat, any suggestions about cleaning at home
/anne...
February 20, 2021
It would depend on why it needs cleaning. Is it actually dirty? Or crumpled and stale smelling? Or... ? How is it made - does it have shoulder pads and other tailoring materials such as horsehair canvas, or is it simple with no lining?
If it is actually dirty, a one-off dryclean (at a place that uses low-impact methods) followed by home maintenance such as spot-cleaning and a steamer may be all it needs.
Lining may shrink, particularly in garments never intended to be washed. If you have the skills to replace the lining, this may be an acceptable option, although sometimes steaming the lining (put the coat inside out) may relax some linings to return to their original size. I have a skirt that did this, and one day I'll rip out the lining and start again...
Some wool fabric shrinks more than others - wool crepe loves shrinking, and will continue to shrink until it is close to boiled wool. Worsted wool - like a man's suit - in my experience doesn't shrink at all. Brushed wools can shrink a bit, depending on how they were treated before manufacture. If it isn't 100% natural fibre, it's also more likely to be OK.
Other tailoring bits and bobs may not be intended to be washed - some fused interfacing bubbles when washed, although sometimes you can pull it off, but don't count on that. Try and look inside the garment to see what is going on.
More informal coats and jackets are usually OK to hand wash, but NEVER put in a washing machine or tumble dryer! Wool absorbs up to 30% of its weight in water before feeling wet, so lay flat to dry so it doesn't sag and pull out of shape. Rolling up in a few towels and pressing out by hand as much water as possible helps this process.
If it is a really expensive coat, you cannot wash it, as it will probably have been shaped with an iron - tailors steam, stretch and shrink areas in addition to seams and darts to shape garments. Washing will destroy all that beautiful work. That needs to be spot cleaned and steamed lightly to refresh (garment steaming isn't the same as a tailor steaming using an iron).
Happy to answer any more questions.
If it is actually dirty, a one-off dryclean (at a place that uses low-impact methods) followed by home maintenance such as spot-cleaning and a steamer may be all it needs.
Lining may shrink, particularly in garments never intended to be washed. If you have the skills to replace the lining, this may be an acceptable option, although sometimes steaming the lining (put the coat inside out) may relax some linings to return to their original size. I have a skirt that did this, and one day I'll rip out the lining and start again...
Some wool fabric shrinks more than others - wool crepe loves shrinking, and will continue to shrink until it is close to boiled wool. Worsted wool - like a man's suit - in my experience doesn't shrink at all. Brushed wools can shrink a bit, depending on how they were treated before manufacture. If it isn't 100% natural fibre, it's also more likely to be OK.
Other tailoring bits and bobs may not be intended to be washed - some fused interfacing bubbles when washed, although sometimes you can pull it off, but don't count on that. Try and look inside the garment to see what is going on.
More informal coats and jackets are usually OK to hand wash, but NEVER put in a washing machine or tumble dryer! Wool absorbs up to 30% of its weight in water before feeling wet, so lay flat to dry so it doesn't sag and pull out of shape. Rolling up in a few towels and pressing out by hand as much water as possible helps this process.
If it is a really expensive coat, you cannot wash it, as it will probably have been shaped with an iron - tailors steam, stretch and shrink areas in addition to seams and darts to shape garments. Washing will destroy all that beautiful work. That needs to be spot cleaned and steamed lightly to refresh (garment steaming isn't the same as a tailor steaming using an iron).
Happy to answer any more questions.
Goldensmile
February 7, 2021
I have a shower curtain that is dry clean only ( can u believe a SHOWER curtain is DRY CLEAN ONLY) so I’m going to try cleaning it on gentle cycle with cold water. Any advice on those dry clean at home kits—Dryel is one name that comes to mind. My mom was using it- but since she has left this life, I can’t ask her about her experience- does it work?
Linda H.
February 7, 2021
I did use Dryel once and my wool slacks and sweater came out quite well. Not a high success rate, just a comment. However, I have also had success with other items marked "Dry Clean Only" in the gentle cycle of my front load washer, air dry after with success. Not much help at all but an interesting dilemma. Thanks for posting.
Kristina C.
August 17, 2020
Haven't seen any suggestions on how to 'dry clean' men's suits at home.... but would love suggestions! I hate having to send hubby's suits out every 2-3 wears - there's got to be a better, cheaper way!
Arati M.
August 17, 2020
Hi Kristina. Thanks for writing in. So, I was speaking to a laundry expert the other day and he was telling me he turns his suit jackets and pants inside out and then rolls them up (separately) into mesh laundry bags and washes it in a shorter cycle and then air-dries them! I haven't been brave enough to try it out yet!! Maybe on an old one? :)
/anne...
August 17, 2020
This advice is only for wool and wool blends.
I hand wash trousers and skirts made from worsted wool - but as I sew most of my own clothes, I have leftover fabric that I can test to see if there are any changes. Don't use hot water, as that may cause shrinkage and a change in the texture of the fabric. Do not wash wool crepe - because it WILL shrink, and it will shrink for the next few washes (this is both from experience, and because of the way the yarn is spun).
Jackets and coats may be able to be washed - again, a hard worsted wool will usually be OK if hand washed gently, but hot water may cause iron-on interfacing to bubble, which is irreversible (and horrible). Brushed wool such as flannel may shrink, although if it's a blend it may be OK. Again, agitation is how felt is made.
More expensive jackets and coats use woven horsehair canvas, which should not be washed, and the final shaping is often done using an iron - if you wash it, the jacket will lose that shape, and even a tailor may not be able to fix that.
A good wool suit should not need to be cleaned more than a couple of times a year - after each wear, it should be brushed and steamed using a garment steamer, and aired overnight before putting it away. Buy a proper steamer that sits on the floor - similar to the ones used in shops - you'll be surprised how many things improve after a steam. I use mine far more than I use an iron, and it's far easier on my clothes, particularly knits.
I hand wash trousers and skirts made from worsted wool - but as I sew most of my own clothes, I have leftover fabric that I can test to see if there are any changes. Don't use hot water, as that may cause shrinkage and a change in the texture of the fabric. Do not wash wool crepe - because it WILL shrink, and it will shrink for the next few washes (this is both from experience, and because of the way the yarn is spun).
Jackets and coats may be able to be washed - again, a hard worsted wool will usually be OK if hand washed gently, but hot water may cause iron-on interfacing to bubble, which is irreversible (and horrible). Brushed wool such as flannel may shrink, although if it's a blend it may be OK. Again, agitation is how felt is made.
More expensive jackets and coats use woven horsehair canvas, which should not be washed, and the final shaping is often done using an iron - if you wash it, the jacket will lose that shape, and even a tailor may not be able to fix that.
A good wool suit should not need to be cleaned more than a couple of times a year - after each wear, it should be brushed and steamed using a garment steamer, and aired overnight before putting it away. Buy a proper steamer that sits on the floor - similar to the ones used in shops - you'll be surprised how many things improve after a steam. I use mine far more than I use an iron, and it's far easier on my clothes, particularly knits.
/anne...
August 17, 2020
Don't use baby shampoo on silk or wool (or any protein fibre) - the pH is designed not to sting a baby's eyes - it isn't designed to be gentle on hair. The pH of hair (or wool, silk, alpaca etc.) is, oddly enough, not the same as your eyes. Just use a gentle liquid designed for the purpose - there are plenty of choices. Keep baby shampoo for babies!
Diana M.
July 30, 2020
I am an actor and my daughter is a stage manager. Costumers are reluctant to let actors take costumes home to wash - they wreck them, or forget to bring them back - and actors are reluctant to wear unwashed costumes for many nights running. Both understandable. Theatre budgets rarely stretch to washing entire casts worth of costumes every night, every few nights, or even weekly. Unless you are doing an energetic musical in August, spraying costumes with vodka is the usual solution and it keeps everybody happy.
Arati M.
August 17, 2020
You're so right. I've heard that too, before. Turns out, vodka is useful far beyond those martinis!!!
Jill V.
July 21, 2020
I own a Eco Cleaning business in Colchester, so there are some shops but may not b3 listed as its new.
Sarah B.
July 14, 2020
What about cleaning my coach purse and wallet??? Any ideas. Thx.
hbertman
November 19, 2020
It depends on the era of your items. If they are vintage, they actually can be washed. Or more correctly, the bag quite likely can be wallets tend to be more fussy. Coach used to include instructions for washing your bag when you purchased it way back when. However if your items are made within the last 20 years, it could be more touch and go; there is still quite a bit of cleaning you can do. Wallets frequently have backing materials in them which should not get wet but they can usually be surface cleaned with a product like Lexol or Leather CPR. Google will be your friend in solving this.
Tina K.
June 24, 2020
Any recommendations for shirts that require dry cleaning? Wash in cold fast cycle and hang dry? Thanks
Arati M.
June 24, 2020
Hi Tina. What material are we talking about? I hand-wash my shirts, silk included (test a spot if colorful/printed, to make sure it doesn't run), using a gentle soap, and dry on a rack.
Halcyon1
April 16, 2020
Don't put recycling in plastic bags. Many people make this mistake. Bags have to be recycled separately.
skb
April 15, 2020
Please post how it goes with your peacoat! I would love to wash mine, but I'm scared to try, as it's a coat that I love. Thank you for this!
tia
April 14, 2020
The only thing I dry clean are printed silks. The fibers are fine to wash, it's the dye you have to watch out for. Solid colors are fine, because they might fade, but who can really tell? Prints can bleed into themselves and once that happens, you're done.
To test colorfastness, wet a white cloth or paper towel and set it on an inconspicuous portion of the garment (preferably with some of all the colors in the print, but if not, red is the most likely to bleed). Leave it for maybe 5-10 minutes. If there's color on the towel, dry clean it because it's totally going to bleed.
Salt or vinegar will work to set the dyes sometimes, but it might not work quickly enough, and that's also not the only reason prints bleed, so if the item is something you don't want to lose, dry clean. If it's not visibly dirty, the vodka trick will work to get smells out.
To test colorfastness, wet a white cloth or paper towel and set it on an inconspicuous portion of the garment (preferably with some of all the colors in the print, but if not, red is the most likely to bleed). Leave it for maybe 5-10 minutes. If there's color on the towel, dry clean it because it's totally going to bleed.
Salt or vinegar will work to set the dyes sometimes, but it might not work quickly enough, and that's also not the only reason prints bleed, so if the item is something you don't want to lose, dry clean. If it's not visibly dirty, the vodka trick will work to get smells out.
Lynn D.
April 13, 2020
This is how I "dry clean" wool sweaters and garments. Spot clean and then throw them in the dryer with a wet bath towel. Dry them on low heat or no heat and then hang or dry flat to complete drying. The wet towel absorbs any dust and dirt from the garment.
Elise
January 14, 2020
Does anyone have a suggestion for a faux fur blanket? I purchased it from Anthropologie a few years ago, but it is taking on all the food smells from my small apartment. I have thought many times of tossing it in the wash, on a delicate cold cycle, but I am not sure about drying it, and whether or not the faux fur would get water damaged. I also wonder if a steamer would work in this situation? Any thoughts? Thank you!
Elise
January 14, 2020
The care tag says to dry clean. It lists the materials as acrylic and polyester.
Susan H.
January 15, 2020
Yes!! Inspired by this article, I put my Restoration Hardware faux fur blanket in the machine - delicate wash, cold water. No water damage. I allowed it to hang dry, and it was perfect. I put it in the dryer just to see if I could make it a bit softer - on the de-wrinkle setting - which allows some steam into the dryer (have no idea how). I think just a refresh cycle, on low or no heat, would work the same. (Also damp wool yarn balls would work perfectly) Came out perfectly!!!
Heidi
January 20, 2020
I have washed my king size faux fur blanket in the washing machine, cold water, gentle cycle. It has the faux suede on the back. Drying it was the biggest problem since the gentle cycle doesn’t spin very fast so there was a lot of water left in it. I put it in the dryer on gentle heat. Many times. Taking it out and re-fluffing it to get all of the blanket exposed to the air. It still looked the same and felt the same, but it was a lot of effort.
Gail
February 21, 2020
I have two and have washed and dried them for 8 years and they look new. Indestructible!!!
Laura
April 15, 2020
Both fabrics washable. I had a similar one from Pier One that said dry clean and it was 100% polyester. It does great in washer and dryer. Many years ago I took a class in textiles . 1971... I know LOTS of new names to fabrics but it always empowered me to wash lots of things. Acrylic is what many sweaters are made with for softness.
Susan W.
January 11, 2020
I have too many wool sweaters. I wash all of them, by hand, with cold water. I use the bathtub because sweaters are longer and heavier than they used to be. I would never, ever send a sweater to the dry cleaners. During high school and college -- long ago in the 1960s -- nearly every garment sent to the dry cleaners was ruined. My white glee club blazer came back covered with black fibers that I swear came from a dog. My first pants suit, white pants with a peach tunic, came back with brown pants and a shrunken tunic. A striped valour dress with a do not wash tag came back stiff as board.
When I became a home sewer in my 30s, I learned that only garments made of more than one fiber, say a wool jacket with a silk, acetate, viscose or nylon lining and then a bit of goat hair interfacing should be dry cleaned. However, most silk is better off hand washed. After all, the Yellow Emperor never saw a dry cleaner but wore some of the world's first silk.
I've had three Irish cardigans in the years between 17 and 70. I've always washed mine. They stayed nice and white while the sweaters that were sent to the cleaners by other women turned yellow.
When I became a home sewer in my 30s, I learned that only garments made of more than one fiber, say a wool jacket with a silk, acetate, viscose or nylon lining and then a bit of goat hair interfacing should be dry cleaned. However, most silk is better off hand washed. After all, the Yellow Emperor never saw a dry cleaner but wore some of the world's first silk.
I've had three Irish cardigans in the years between 17 and 70. I've always washed mine. They stayed nice and white while the sweaters that were sent to the cleaners by other women turned yellow.
Linda H.
January 10, 2020
Thanks to all for wonderful suggestions. If anyone has ideas on keeping moths out of sweater drawers, i would really appreciate your thoughts. I did notice that The Laundress has a Cedar Spray that they say is helpful.
Arati M.
January 10, 2020
So, growing up, we had moth balls falling out of every drawer and every closet. Now that I know better, I follow this instead: Make a sachet of dried lavender (you can also dry fresh lavender yourself) + rice or buy one readymade and hang it with a ribbon or place the sachets in drawers. The recommendation is that you change these out every season, as lavender's scent fades over time. But yes, I've heard that Cedar works well, as well!
Linda H.
January 10, 2020
Thank you. I have read that but it is certainly wonderful to have experience shared. Avoiding moth balls for the same reason as you suggested. Nasty things!!
Lisa T.
July 22, 2020
I owned a vintage clothing store for many years and always used cedar shavings (pet store guinea pig variety) in linen or silk bags made from old shirts and scarves. Never had a moth problem. I also wash wool and/or cashmere sweaters in the washing machine on the gentle cycle with cold water. Lay flat to dry. No major colour mixing and only a few sweaters per load.
Ring around the collar, pit stains, cuff stains on cotton shirts all come out if boiled in a soup pot with 2 tbsp. Of powdered dishwasher soap. Sunlight is my fave. This will be the most disgusting and satisfying laundry thing you will ever do and will revive the grungiest shirt around. Throw it in a regular wash afterwards.
Ring around the collar, pit stains, cuff stains on cotton shirts all come out if boiled in a soup pot with 2 tbsp. Of powdered dishwasher soap. Sunlight is my fave. This will be the most disgusting and satisfying laundry thing you will ever do and will revive the grungiest shirt around. Throw it in a regular wash afterwards.
TMc
October 23, 2024
Linda, I may be 4 years late, but I'm running to my kitchen to test out your concoction. My husband's white uniform shirts (neck and pits) just never seem to come clean no matter what I use. There has been no spray or mixture that cuts that man's greasy skin on his collar. I'm a firm believer in powdered dishwasher detergent (Just throw some in the bottom of the dishwasher along with normal detergent in the compartment. Run hot hot water before you start your dishwasher, too!) I will sing your smarty-pantness when I try your method. Thanks for sharing Ü
Doro W.
January 9, 2020
"The other day a friend told me she sends her expensive jeans for dry cleaning. (She asked me not to judge her, so neither should you.)"
I *am* judging her, and we *should* judge her. Americans already use more energy per capita, and create more garbage per capita, than anyone in the world -- that includes our peers in developed nations with great standards of living. The idea that someone can't do without dry-cleaning in *addition* to all of the chemical damage we do is deeply distressing.
That anyone, in this day and age, would buy garments that need to be dry-cleaned is deeply distressing -- there's no shortage of wonderful, beautiful clothing that doesn't need dry-cleaning. And the idea that you (AU) haven't pushed yourself to go a year without buying clothes is also deeply distressing. (I bought two shirts in 2019 bc I've gained weight; before that, I last bought clothes in 2008. It's not a hardship.)
When are people going to GET it? We are in a climate crisis! The steps you (AU) took in the past year are great, but they're not enough. I can't understand why humans aren't getting this: Either make moderate but consistent changes now, or be faced with radical, govt-imposed changes in 10 years and beyond, and get ready for massive economic disruption, climate-refugee migration, and war.
Everyone: If your physician told you that continuing to eat sugar would exacerbate your diabetes and require the amputation of your legs, would you keep eating sugar? Please take this seriously! Bar soap, no plastic, 64F in the winter and 76F in the summer, stop shopping, stop making garbage other than Q-tips and food scraps. Remember that everything you buy requires climate-damaging energy for its production and transport, and that the cheap stuff you buy = slave labor somewhere.
Read Bill McKibben and George Monbiot. Please see the true and entire cost of everything you buy and do.
I *am* judging her, and we *should* judge her. Americans already use more energy per capita, and create more garbage per capita, than anyone in the world -- that includes our peers in developed nations with great standards of living. The idea that someone can't do without dry-cleaning in *addition* to all of the chemical damage we do is deeply distressing.
That anyone, in this day and age, would buy garments that need to be dry-cleaned is deeply distressing -- there's no shortage of wonderful, beautiful clothing that doesn't need dry-cleaning. And the idea that you (AU) haven't pushed yourself to go a year without buying clothes is also deeply distressing. (I bought two shirts in 2019 bc I've gained weight; before that, I last bought clothes in 2008. It's not a hardship.)
When are people going to GET it? We are in a climate crisis! The steps you (AU) took in the past year are great, but they're not enough. I can't understand why humans aren't getting this: Either make moderate but consistent changes now, or be faced with radical, govt-imposed changes in 10 years and beyond, and get ready for massive economic disruption, climate-refugee migration, and war.
Everyone: If your physician told you that continuing to eat sugar would exacerbate your diabetes and require the amputation of your legs, would you keep eating sugar? Please take this seriously! Bar soap, no plastic, 64F in the winter and 76F in the summer, stop shopping, stop making garbage other than Q-tips and food scraps. Remember that everything you buy requires climate-damaging energy for its production and transport, and that the cheap stuff you buy = slave labor somewhere.
Read Bill McKibben and George Monbiot. Please see the true and entire cost of everything you buy and do.
Arati M.
January 31, 2020
Hi. First of all, thank you for your comment, Doro. I appreciate both your sentiment—and your certainly-not-unfounded worries about the planet. I share the very same concerns. I was told, however (by someone far, far wiser than me), that when you judge, you are potentially losing the opportunity to debate with, empower and impact. But like 2tattered says below: we *can* hold ourselves (and our families) to the highest standards. I thank you for being an aware consumer—we need those now more than ever.
Fancy F.
April 25, 2020
When you live in a glass house,
buying curtains for the windows doesn't help. That’s a reality quote, written by reality. Read that.
buying curtains for the windows doesn't help. That’s a reality quote, written by reality. Read that.
catalinalacruz
May 4, 2023
I'm with Doro 100%. We can't stand by and not judge while we wreck the planet. Judging doesn't mean you have lost the opportunity to debate with them. It means you have made the decision that their actions are unethical, and even harmful to the environment. Then you tactfully and kindly share articles such as this one, and hope you can persuade them that each individual has a responsibility to our planet and its human and creature residents.
Carkies
January 9, 2020
The Laundress cashmere shampoo is epic. I wash all my delicates on hand wash cycle and the Laundress Cashmere Shampoo. People ask me where I get my cashmere because it’s so soft. Dry cleaning ruins cashmere in my opinion. I don’t work for them—just a sweater lover and a mom!
Amy L.
July 26, 2020
It's a box of disposable sheets called "Color Catchers". Available at the grocery.
Susan H.
January 9, 2020
Great article. How about a down comforter? This one comes with pretty emphatic instructions to dry clean only, but I imagine that it must be the same as a down jacket?
Linda H.
January 9, 2020
I have 3 down comforters that have been washed quite a few times. Woolite, delicate setting in an HE washing machine. Dry with tennis balls. They are just fine.
Frances F.
January 9, 2020
I've used the dryer sheets sold for dry cleaning garments in your home dryer. 20 minutes on medium...I washed a down comforter and down pillows (seperate washes). And a silk blouse. Everything came out clean, fluffy and smelling fresh. The blouse had a few wrinkles. I sprayed it with a fine mist of water and hung it on the shower rack. The wrinkles disappeared.
Frances F.
January 9, 2020
They are available in the supermarket. I've used 2 brands and both worked fine. My son asked me if I'd bought new pillows.
Ellyn A.
January 10, 2020
I also wash my down comforters also in baby shampoo, and make sure they go thru two rinse cycles to make sure all soap is out. ... If you think about it, the duck lives in water. And if dry cleaned all those chemicals are in it after cleaning... I dry it on very mild or just air at end with tennis balls. I use lots of tennis balls... and the trick it to TOTALLY make sure it is dry.. go over each inch ( really doesn't take long.).. you do not want any moisture left, so drying takes time. lots of time... Do not use high heat...
Melissa B.
January 10, 2020
I wash our family’s down comforters and down jackets— small amount of mild shampoo, double rinse, then into the dryer with wool dryer balls, usually on low heat.
Pheline
May 17, 2023
I line-dry everything I can, especially socks, underwear, and shirts that may have overlooked spots. I've never dry cleaned a comforter and line dry them as much as possible, often just finishing them in a dryer. I wouldn't use tennis balls for long because I've seen comforters with cracked cotton fabric.
I didn't have a dryer for years and just fluffed things by shaking them. I never use fabric softener, either.
If your (US) neighborhood, town, condo association, HOA 🤮, especially for-profit HOA 🤢🤮, etc, claims you can't use a clothesline find out if you're in a Right to Dry state. If you are, the state law supersedes the rest and nobody can prevent you from using a clothesline.
I didn't have a dryer for years and just fluffed things by shaking them. I never use fabric softener, either.
If your (US) neighborhood, town, condo association, HOA 🤮, especially for-profit HOA 🤢🤮, etc, claims you can't use a clothesline find out if you're in a Right to Dry state. If you are, the state law supersedes the rest and nobody can prevent you from using a clothesline.
See what other Food52 readers are saying.