Mr Badger
Practically Family
- Messages
- 545
- Location
- Somerset, UK
Finally, Spring seems to have, um, sprung (sproing?) here in SW UK and I've devised a nifty, no-shrink method of de-funking your selvedge jeans.
I've never washed my selvedge jeans, as I like them to stay resolutely dark and the same size as when I bought 'em, but I've gotta say that they've got a little whiffy in the seat area from all those hours sat at my desk (beware the inherited office chair, that's all I'm gonna say!)...
As you no doubt know, using Febreeze to defunk clothing just locks the smell in. And while the much-loved 'vinegar and water' dousing did kinda work on jeans, it didn't seem to penetrate right through the double/triple seams, resulting in the return of unwanted funk near deadline time (they don't call it 'hot desking' for nothing, y'know!).
Therefore, I ran a sinkful of luke warm water, squirted in some travel wash and swirled in half a capful of handwashing solution (the kind you use for silk or other delicates, including gab), then gave the backside-only of each pair of jeans a good swoosh about. I then hung each pair over the side of the bath and sprayed 'em off with cold water using the shower attachment.
After that, I hung 'em outside on the line to dry.
The result: sweet-smelling denim with no colour loss and next-to-no shinkage! Phew... or, rather, phew-less!
These are the pairs of jeans I washed:
LVC S501xx 1944 dry
LVC S501xx 1944 boil wash
LVC S501xx 1944 faded
LVC 501xx 1933 dry
LVC 201xx 1920 dry
LVC 501xx 1955 dry
Lee 101z first Euro repro, dry
Lee 101z later, half-selvedge, dry
Lee 'Boss of the Road' painter jeans, 1960s, dry
Wrangler Blue Bell 13MWZ
Wrangler Blue Bell 13MWB
Dress-o-Rama Ace jeans, black, dry
Pointer Brand herringbone painter jeans, dry
I've never washed my selvedge jeans, as I like them to stay resolutely dark and the same size as when I bought 'em, but I've gotta say that they've got a little whiffy in the seat area from all those hours sat at my desk (beware the inherited office chair, that's all I'm gonna say!)...
As you no doubt know, using Febreeze to defunk clothing just locks the smell in. And while the much-loved 'vinegar and water' dousing did kinda work on jeans, it didn't seem to penetrate right through the double/triple seams, resulting in the return of unwanted funk near deadline time (they don't call it 'hot desking' for nothing, y'know!).
Therefore, I ran a sinkful of luke warm water, squirted in some travel wash and swirled in half a capful of handwashing solution (the kind you use for silk or other delicates, including gab), then gave the backside-only of each pair of jeans a good swoosh about. I then hung each pair over the side of the bath and sprayed 'em off with cold water using the shower attachment.
After that, I hung 'em outside on the line to dry.
The result: sweet-smelling denim with no colour loss and next-to-no shinkage! Phew... or, rather, phew-less!
These are the pairs of jeans I washed:
LVC S501xx 1944 dry
LVC S501xx 1944 boil wash
LVC S501xx 1944 faded
LVC 501xx 1933 dry
LVC 201xx 1920 dry
LVC 501xx 1955 dry
Lee 101z first Euro repro, dry
Lee 101z later, half-selvedge, dry
Lee 'Boss of the Road' painter jeans, 1960s, dry
Wrangler Blue Bell 13MWZ
Wrangler Blue Bell 13MWB
Dress-o-Rama Ace jeans, black, dry
Pointer Brand herringbone painter jeans, dry