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launderess

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Quiet Please, There´s a Lady on Stage
Anyone planning to purchase anything made of cotton from linens to clothing should do so soon. Published reports state prices for all items made of pure cotton have increased and are exepected to continue doing so well into next year.

Bad weather in India, China and other parts of Asia have meant a very poor cotton crop, and the market forces are driving up prices.
 
Out my way Cotton is grown -sometimes by tobacco farmers-as another cash crop for them-and for crop rotation-also peanuts and soybeans.After the harvest of the cotton you see strands of it hanging on power,phone,cable TV lines,or just about anything outside-even on our antennas at the transmitter site-eventually the wind blows the strands away.
 
Cotton.

10 years ago I purchased different styles of garments from Carhartt. The past week it was finally time to replace some of the Items (Sweatshirts and Long Sleeve T-shirts.)

All the products I bought 10 years ago were made here in the U.S. The new items are made in Dominican Republic, India, China, etc. Sigh... I know I'll never get the wear out of them.
 
I've never had bedding or toweling that isn't made of 100% cotton, I must add that I have a couple of bed shirts sets that are linen and also many kitchen rags that are a blend of linen and cotton as they pile less. Synthetic fibers are common for these uses in the US then?
 
Yes, we do have synthetic blends for bedsheets and towels. But those are usually the cheaper brands. Usually families with kids buy those. They are long lasting.

But most people "in the know" about comfort will choose to spend a little extra money and buy full cotton sheets. There is a big difference between the two.

BTW, JCPenny is having a 50% off sale this weekend on linens. We may want to stock up.

Whatever happened to that member who had the coupons for 20% off at JCPenny? Hadn't seen him in awhile.
 
Bed Linens of "Mad-Made" Textiles

First came upon the American scene in the late 1950's or 1960's under such names as "Duracale" or "Lustercale" and were a cotton/polyester blend or 100% polyester. Billed as "no iron" the things were meant to free housewives and others from the bain of washday, ironing bed linens. Many persons still swear by such things, including hotels, hospitals, and other commercial establishments, for my part find them horrible.

Polyester does not breathe like cotton, thus tends to get very "warm" when sleeping. Also polyester does not launder the same as cotton, so one cannot use water temps >warm without risking thermal damage. Well suppose one could if the washing machine had a decent enough PP cycle, but still there is a risk.

Ironically polyester/cotton blend bed linens were a huge hit in the UK/Europe, and were one of the reasons many housewives on that side of the pond put all those wonderful pure linen, hemp,nettle and cotton bed linens in to cupboards, trunks and so forth; locked and threw away the keys. After ages of having to deal with the pain that laundering and ironing linen and later cotton bed linens entailed, many were happy to finally be free of at least ironing. Polyester being a hydrophopic fiber, things came out of the washing machine almost dry, requiring only a short time in a tumble dryer, or merely hung to dry. Since many did not own tumble dryers, fast drying bed linens saved all that hanging wet laundry all over the flat and so forth.

Commercial establishments love polyester/cotton blends for table and bed linen because it is eaiser (in some respects) to launder and feed through ironers. So restaurants, hotels, and such purchase them and or their laundry/linen rental service demands and or only stocks blended textiles. Should say "demand" is probably not the proper word, but the charges for laundering pure cotton or linen is usually higher than blends. When you have several hundred napkins, tablecloths, sheets, pillow slips and so forth per week, cost savings quickly add up.

Polyester/cotton blend also replaced what was considered "low end" of bed linens, that is cotton muslin.

Muslin, especially in the heavier (and thus more sturdy and long lasting) weights is a pain to launder and iron. Cotton absorbs lots of water and that water must be mostly evaporated before it can be ironed. Either that or such linens must be nearly dried then ironed with a professional steam ironing system.
 
Good to know that, I guess that Italians (people I know) are just more traditional then :) ...anyway, I never ironed my bedsheets, just folded them after they are dry (line dried indoors of course and washed no less than 60°C)
 
US Made Carhartt

You CAN still find US made Carhartt. It isn't as easy as it once was, and I have found that you must go to a 'work wear' store (I've always gone to locally owned ones not chains so I have no idea what may be in your area).

I find the US made ones are still sized (I got a 48 inch carhartt jacket at a local army/navy store last year). They still seem to have good quality. Being quite broad in the shoulders but without much of a 'bay window' I have a heck of a time with small/medium/large/xlarge as by time you fit my shoulders I am wearing a tent...
 
To Whirlcool

Hey, thanks for asking. Been on sick leave since May but will be going back the end of this month. Haven't been participating much in the last several months due to having chemo and not feeling like joining the human race :-(! JCP should be having at least one of the special 20% off sales sometime in the early part of December and I have the list of people to whom to send the coupon.
Roger Brown
Vero Beach FL
 
I would have to guess then the cotton grown my way gets shipped to China,Domitican Republic,etc for processing into clothes and sheets and such?Some of the harvesting I have seen-the cotton is picked by machines-then goes into a VERY LARGE baler-huge bales of cotton fiber get trucked out.Often wrapped with shrink wrap.Right at the site its picked from.The operations cause some of the fibers to be airborne-thus end up in the powerlines,our antennas,and such.Guess those bales are conveneint for long distance shipping!
 
Veroroger:

I am so sorry to hear of you undergoing chemo. That's not fun at all. I hope you get better soon! Let us know how you are from time to time.
And thanks for responding to my message even though I know you probably didn't feel up to it. That was nice of you.

Allen
 
I warned all of you over a year ago of this

And was told it would not happen.. so now who was right? The us shortage is from (i will say again) farmers who plant corn this year instead of cotton. for ethnol. Very little cotton was planted compared to the past 5 years.

Commerical linens prices have already doubled in the last 3 mo. and reps tell me to expect more increases.
 
Shipping Cotton Over Seas For Processing

Sadly very little remains of the United States, once great textile business. Production once centered in the North first moved to the South, then finally overseas all in chasing cheaper costs.

IIRC, Pillowtex was one of the last huge textile producers to go bankrupt.
 
Mac,
Good to see you posting!! No one listens to me either. I guess that they have good reason too, given that I have a 40LB. Commercial FL in my basement, and I'm going to shred a Calypso for being naughty.
 
Melvin

My linen reps are some I have used for over 30 years and are now also good friends.. they tell me things they dont tell others. So I DO know well ahead of time what is going on in the textile arena. I have several detergent and machinery reps that are the same way.. Being loyal to certain ones for many years DOES pay off in the long run.. I bought 250 dozen extra sheets while the price was still low. And have sit back and watched the prices go up almost weekly. Same for towels . With washcloths, We use well over 300 dozen a mo.( 3 bales) they were $ 250.oo a bale now they are over 400 a bale. I bought 50 bales and saved big dollars while I was called stupid by the PA. Now he is the one in trouble.. Have not posted much for a while as dealing with major health problems.. Getting old is NOT fun! [this post was last edited: 11/7/2010-14:15]
 

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