How Often You Should Wash Your Sheets

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

Help Support :

Ultramatic

Well-known member
Platinum Member
Joined
Sep 28, 2011
Messages
40,859
Location
New York City
 

 

Yes this again.

New York Times (Paywall for some)

 

<h1 class="_2bba188d" data-scp="title hidden"><span style="font-size: 18pt;">How Often You Should Wash Your Sheets (And How to Get Them Really Clean)</span></h1>
 

 
What a bunch of BS!  We have sheets that are over 35 years old that have been washed repeatedly in hot water and dried on High and they are still just fine.  I have always changed and washed our sheets weekly.  Granted, we have 8 sets of sheets, and we rotate them, but they all get washed and dried several times a year.

 

Eddie
 
What qualifies

theses expert? Who are they?
Is there a test they take?
What’s with washing sheets in vinegar (notice they didn’t say rinse them)
Why in the hell would you reduce the P.H of wash water with vinegar?
“How to really get them clean”
How come they won’t say wash em in hot water with a detergent with activated oxygen bleaching system (powdered Tide cones to mind) rinse in warm, hang them in the sun to dry.
Not saying everyone needs to do that but..
I mean if you want to “really get them clean”
 
What a silly article. Indeed, who are these "experts"? Some of the comments following the article were even worse - - people even just hanging their sheets out to air? If you're going to the trouble to strip the bed and remake it, why not just wash the sheets? And cold water washing for bed linens? NO chance in my house! I guess everyone needs a "schtick" - these experts proselytize like they just rediscovered fire and water. It's laundry and common sense - not that difficult. My mother washed bed linens weekly in hot water, used LCB (Clorox, Purex, or our local Brooklyn brand - Aqua Lina) only on whites and for the rare set of colored sheets, hot water and proper dosage of her detergent of choice (Cheer, Rinso Blue, Fab, Ajax or occasionally, Oxydol). Most of our bed linens were white muslin - most popular through 1950's and 60's.

I continue with the same practice today though most of my sheets are Land's End Oxford Cloth or Linen - surprisingly good values and quite durable. Of course, this is a very personal matter- even though I shower twice a day, sleep in gym shorts and T-shirts, and while I don't feel like I sweat during the night, I'm sure there is a little sweat here and there so going two weeks without changing beds isn't an option for me. Do I like making the bed? Absolutely not - I find it one of the most annoying chores, but it must be done.

One of my friends (an engineer and self proclaimed subject matter expert on everything from cooking to cinema, theater, opera, electronics and construction among other things) regularly ridicules me and accuses me of creating unnecessary drama and trying to "recreate" my mother's traditions. So I send him weekly photos of my clothesline (another point of ridicule) with my bed linens billowing happily in the breeze. Clean, fresh sheets just feel better and I sleep better in them. Enough said.

And yes, I use a fresh bath towel every day - based on advice from my dermatologist. But bath towels are a separate issue for another day...

One last comment - I know there are folks who like to have their pets sleep in/on their beds, Again, a personal choice but one I find unpleasant (to say the least). That is the one occasion (outside illness) where I would have to change sheets every day. So this brings me to those awful commercial for Gain detergent showing the family dog chewing on the towel or rolling around on the bed, then the family burying their faces in those items? My God, how much perfume is in that stuff to overpower the dog smell? How about less heavy perfume and more clean???
 
What a silly article. Indeed, who are these "experts"? Some of the comments following the article were even worse - - people even just hanging their sheets out to air? If you're going to the trouble to strip the bed and remake it, why not just wash the sheets? And cold water washing for bed linens? NO chance in my house! I guess everyone needs a "schtick" - these experts proselytize like they just rediscovered fire and water. It's laundry and common sense - not that difficult. My mother washed bed linens weekly in hot water, used LCB (Clorox, Purex, or our local Brooklyn brand - Aqua Lina) only on whites and for the rare set of colored sheets, hot water and proper dosage of her detergent of choice (Cheer, Rinso Blue, Fab, Ajax or occasionally, Oxydol). Most of our bed linens were white muslin - most popular through 1950's and 60's.

I continue with the same practice today though most of my sheets are Land's End Oxford Cloth or Linen - surprisingly good values and quite durable. Of course, this is a very personal matter- even though I shower twice a day, sleep in gym shorts and T-shirts, and while I don't feel like I sweat during the night, I'm sure there is a little sweat here and there so going two weeks without changing beds isn't an option for me. Do I like making the bed? Absolutely not - I find it one of the most annoying chores, but it must be done.

One of my friends (an engineer and self proclaimed subject matter expert on everything from cooking to cinema, theater, opera, electronics and construction among other things) regularly ridicules me and accuses me of creating unnecessary drama and trying to "recreate" my mother's traditions. So I send him weekly photos of my clothesline (another point of ridicule) with my bed linens billowing happily in the breeze. Clean, fresh sheets just feel better and I sleep better in them. Enough said.

And yes, I use a fresh bath towel every day - based on advice from my dermatologist. But bath towels are a separate issue for another day...

One last comment - I know there are folks who like to have their pets sleep in/on their beds, Again, a personal choice but one I find unpleasant (to say the least). That is the one occasion (outside illness) where I would have to change sheets every day. So this brings me to those awful commercial for Gain detergent showing the family dog chewing on the towel or rolling around on the bed, then the family burying their faces in those items. My God, how much perfume is in that stuff to overpower the dog smell? How about less heavy perfume and more clean???
 
I wash my sheets in not only hot water, but with LCB (just a little).. I could not imagine using COLD water for sheets.

Do you guys vacuum your mattress with every sheet change? I do...I used to not do that but I feel like I've half-assed it if I don't..

sometimes I do it every two weeks for my bed because often I will sleep on top of the bed with a blanket without even unmaking the bed..especially in the summer..

but would you believe there are people out there that go MONTHS without changing their sheets and they think that's normal? I think 2 weeks is the MAX you should go.

My sheets and towels smell SOOO fresh but I don't like to brag.
 
Don’t worry bragging rights are given, and maybe I should actually get around to vacuuming man my mattress again, I remember I used to shampoo it because the water came out quite dirty so I hundred percent thought it was worth it and it’s probably something I need to do again and why not I’ll make a day out of it tomorrow, wash my sheets Vacuum and shampoo the bed because yeah I haven’t done it in kind of awhile and I tend to wash my sheets roughly at most every two weeks sometimes more often if I feel like it, mainly just because putting the dam doona cover over the Doona is actually kind of a pain and then figuring out where do I pin it to make sure the Doona doesn’t decide to become a big wad of cloth and stuffing
 
Change sheets weekly for the most part, and sometimes in summer twice a week. Launder mattress pad cover at least once a month, have a plastic cover over the mattress and spray it down and wipe with Lysol when I launder the mattress pad. All of it washed in hot water, 125 degrees, and everything hung out on the line all day, makes a huge difference, even if you use a middle shelf detergent. Sun bleached. No FS, don’t want to breathe fumes.

Barry
 
I change sheets roughly once a week and we have three sets, so sheets get washed approximately every three weeks in one big load. They're thin light fabric and we only have a full bed so they fit in the washer easily all together. Since my sheets are colored though I wash in warm instead of hot. Cold water is a bridge too far IMO.
 
My wife and I wash our sheets once a week MAX

in an LG front load. Heavy Duty, extra hot (gets up to 160 deg F), 2 rinses, Persil with bleach added 1hr into the cycle. Comforter is patterned but can take the rigors of the wash cycle and hasn't been damaged. The rest of our bedding is white. Towels get treated the same way.
 
Back
Top