Missed The Memo: Wash Jeans Every Six Months

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frigilux

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I wear a lot of black both at work and at leisure, so a page headlined "Don't Be Afraid Of The Dark" in this month's Details caught my eye. As you might expect, it sang the praises of black jeans as the hot denim trend of the season.  I've been wearing black jeans for 40 years and have watched, unfazed, as they fell in and out of fashion's favor several times.

 

Anyway...Frank Pizzurro, owner of Brooklyn Denim Co., was asked to give his expert advice on laundering jeans.  Here's what he had to say: "We are not big fans of never washing your jeans." (Aside: Such a school of thought actually exists?)

 

"Our suggestion is to wear them for three to six months.  At that point, wash in cold water, inside out, with a small amount of mild detergent; rinse thoroughly and hang dry."

 

My first inclination leans toward disgust.  No, wait; horror.  Horror and disgust.

 

Does anyone out there really wash their jeans only once every three to six months...or never?  

 

 

 

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Even if I only wear them for about 4 to 5 hours each time, I only wear them twice before they are put in the hamper. I don't get to wear jeans as often as I like anymore--leaving high-tech industry and casual Fridays put an end to such a luxury. Sit may take a whjile to get all 6 pair I wear assembled for the "load". I wash mine inside out on the jeans/denim cycle--that uses a lot of water and medium speed tumble and medium spin speed. tumble dry until lightly damp and let dryer cool down. Remove and hang up.
 
I only own one pair of jeans, and they are always washed everytime they are worn, even if only for an hour. I wash anything that has come in contact with my skin everytime it is worn, and jackets etc. when they start looking a bit dingy.
 
Actually A Common Thing

At least from what one can remember among certain sets of persons growing up in the 1980's.

In order to preserve the colour and what not persons washed their jeans as little as possible. But then many of these person had work jeans, club jeans, shopping jeans, skinny jeans, fat day jeans, "bloated week" jeans, school jeans, and so forth.

Thing everyone wanted was to keep that new dark colour. Some just had their jeans dry cleaned. Those that wore several times before laundering would hang them to "air" for several days before putting away.

Obviously if the jeans were stained or soiled they went for cleaning or into the wash.
 
I like black jeans for working on cars or machinery. But they get washed promptly after getting soiled. The aroma of dirty engine oil - or worse, gear lube - is not pleasant to have even in a hamper for very long. If the black fades, I figure, so what? The worst that can happen is the grease stains show up more, but then a hot wash with a good phosphated powder detergent will fix that.

Black however is not so good for working in the garden or on a roof on a hot sunny day. Even light weight black pants can get too hot.

As for blue jeans fading... amusing that people would try to prevent that, and then go out and buy pre-faded jeans anyway. Fashion fads.
 
I have heard of this

I know several people to Laundress" point who have several pairs of "situational" black jeans. One person in particular wears their "good" black jeans only 2 twice per month, he sprays them with frebreeze extra strength between wearings and does a "steam touch up tumble " in his Bravos dryer. He washes them quarterly using cold water and woolite for darks.
 
3-6 months

What a disgusting thought.

I once had a couple of pairs of black jeans which through regular washing, faded to grey.

To restore them, I bought Dylon black dye powder, which was added directly to the washing machine drum. The clothing was added and washed at 60 degrees Celsius (hot).

The jeans came out looking like new, but the stitched-in logo labels changed to black too. The washer had to be run on a hot wash to clear the dye residue. I was quite impressed by the results.
 
Black Jeans and Pants every three to six months? Probably me.

First, I have four lines of clothes. I have my house lines, and then the going out line, and then the dirty work around the house line.

So for every day around the house I wear ok looking clothes but nothing great and they may have some holes in them and these get washed weeky. I have my second house line and these look better and are good enough to wear to picnic or someplace where you are gonna get messy, depending on the mess they may or may not get washed that week but usually they will. The dirty work around the house line will usually get washed within two weeks depending on if I am going to wear them twice or not.

If I go out to dinner or shopping or the doctors or someplace I have the going out line, these include the black jeans as well as black casual cotton pants. These also include linen and wool dress slacks which will see the dry cleaners but not after each wear. With these as soon as I get home I take them off hang them up and slip into my house clothes. If these get a spot on them I will first try to remove it with a no lint cloth, if this doesn't work I will wash them in cold water, inside out, with Persil Fewa (for darks) but this is rare.

So yeah this comment about every six months is about the schedule I follow for black pants....if that.

I am clean before I put them on, I am careful when I wear them, I am wearing underwear, they do not smell, there are no dirty marks showing and they are NOT faded so what's the problem again?
 
Should Like To Point Out That Historically

Clothing generally wasn't sent to the wash unless it was dirty and or stained (sometimes not even then *LOL*). It really was not until the modern automatic washing machine then tumble dryer took hold that Americans a least adopted habits of laundering anything that had been merely looked at much less worn once. If anything it was undergarments that were changed daily (again sometimes not always)and subjected to frequent laundering.

Much of this simply had to do with the three day long and back breaking work that went into doing wash by hand. Wringer and other early washing machines were slightly better but laundry day still was allot of work including ironing. It really was the very rich and or comfortable well off that could either afford to send their washing out and or bring someone in to do the job.

Think about the average large family of our grandparent's day. Can you imagine how much wash would be generated by a husband, wife, and just four children if everything that was worn once went to the laundry?

Detachable collars and cuffs for shirts were invented by a woman in Troy, NY because she was that sick and tired of laundering and ironing her husband's shirts when it was usually only the collars that were soiled. It was a far easier solution to wash a load of shirt collars (or send them out) and allow shirts to air between use.
 
I know that the black wool habits of the Sister of Mercy were rarely cleaned. Each nun had two habits which they alternated, wearing one day, airing the next.
The starched white head parts were changed weekly or as needed. Never had a dirty nun.

Think of how careful we are when away and traveling light and how meticulous to keep the jeans clean. If you're wearing them without undies, well that's another matter
in a "well-worn thread" ; -D down the pike.
 
Cleaning Wool

Aside from woolens sweaters and such was rarely done before modern dry cleaning came along. The alternative once petrol was discovered was to use kerosene or gasoline in open tubs for "dry cleaning" a process so dangerous it is amazing persons actually used such a process.

Prior to all this the best that could be done was to brush off surface dirt and soils, then immerse or spot treat the garment in various absorbents such as Fuller's Earth, bran or some such.

Happily wool tends to shed dirt and odors easily so that usually a good brushing and airing is only required. Talk about garments that aren't cleaned frequently, many gentlemen do not send their suits out to be cleaned except perhaps once a season or yearly, if that.
 
I'd Be Careful....

....About figuring that anything infrequently washed "doesn't smell."

The reason is that we can't usually smell ourselves - our ordinary personal odor becomes olfactory "background" that our noses are so accustomed to we don't actually smell it any more. Obviously, when we're exceptionally sweaty from exertion or stress, we can then smell ourselves, because it's an unusual situation.

Background smells are so familiar to us that we often deny their existence, without knowing it. Have you ever been away from your house on vacation, and when you came back, found that the house smelled funny? That's because your sense of smell lost familiarity with that odor as background - actually, that's the way your house smells.

So, an infrequently washed item of clothing might well be odor-free. But that should be a fact checked out with others you trust, not an assumption based on what your nose is picking up.

I once met a fashion magazine editor who was adamantly against the use of deodorant; she claimed that no one needed it, and offered herself as proof. All I can say is that I'd put what I smelled up against the smell of the Budweiser Clydesdales any day; she couldn't smell herself, and was far too powerful a person for anyone to tell the truth to.
 
Oh Am Well Aware Of "Whiff Awareness"

Yes, persons develop a tolerance to scents both pleasant or foul.

Those of us living in today's modern world would have to stand well upwind from many persons well into the 1950's in some areas of the Western world at least. Bathing was not always as frequent (if it occurred at all, which during some periods of history it didn't)as such persons from royalty on down often had a whiff about them, some not that far removed from a rank goat.

Now of course for even those used to such conditions there were limits, but we today would simply find it horrible. I mean you can only imagine what the court of Louis XIV for all it's glamour and glitter smelled like.

Then there is what I call the "Old Lady Perfume Habit"; you know the older woman that has been wearing her signature scent (why God is it always Shalimar?) for so long she herself cannot detect it; that causes her to douse every inch of herself in scent till you are gasping for breath she enters the room.
 
The Mind Reels About How You Came Upon That Bit Of Informati

Why, my Dear, I though you knew: Before my sexual reassignment, I was known as Sister Michael Marie, RSM. The Belly Wiggles.
 
I quit using both Cheer For Darks and Woolite For Dark Colors because they contain optical brighteners which make blacks look dusty. Why a company would include brighteners in detergent made for washing blacks is beyond me.

Perwoll doesn't have optical brighteners and it cleans better than Woolite. Keeps blacks looking great after many trips through the washer. I buy it online.

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JEANS

LOL....I wear my jean I wash me jeans..Obviously these people need a fastidious gay man on the payroll....
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 Rob in Palm Springs
 
I think there are two classes of jeans, work horse jeans and show horse jeans. Obviously we are not paying over a hundred dollars a pair for work horse jeans that some people are paying for show horse jeans. There was an article about these expensive jeans in either the New York Times or Wall Street Journal earlier this year. Some of these jeans are coated with wax to give them a special appearance and the wax will be removed with normal cleaning methods. It has to be replaced and most cleaners said they would not touch them. It's just more fashion BS.
 
I have a friend who dresses very fashionably, and he spends big bucks on clothing.  He always looks really great, and right in step with whatever is "in" this season, but he'll spend more on a suit or pair of shoes than my entire wardrobe is worth.  He loves clothes; he loves shopping for clothes.

 

The aforementioned Details article showed several pairs of black designer-level jeans, with the prices topping-out at $790 for Dior.  I think my last pair of Levis cost $50, if that.

 

 

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WTF??? Yuck!!! 3 times is the maximum time I use jeans...Frank Pizzurro is a Nobel filthy one! LOL Maybe that's because they knows their jeans are no made with the quality they should be ??? "we are no big fans of never wash yuour jeans" like if it would be normal or acceptable are there really people that filthy around that never does? Every 5 to 6 months... U MAD?
I do have many black jeans from several years,  and I always washed them with warm water and regular powders, still perfect as new and use them quite often.
Unless jeans or whatever is dark is not of good quality I don't feel I've to be worried about fading, that never happened for or our items,  when they fades usually is because they're crappy stuff, infact some of the chinese boutique stuff I have not only have crappy fabrics and cotton but also crappy dyies, also happened once that despite I washed them first time just after I was home from the shopping they used to leave my legs anf undies full of a dark patina, the dye just transferred due to my sweat...
That's why if I buy something I prefer buy something that is  more expensive but of good quality rather than buying many but of poor quality.....

I'd also never send something to dry cleaners, one reason is that I think it's waist of money since despite what labels says "dry clean only" or "no water wash"  it turns out that I can water wash at home the same with perfect results, of course I never washed my mom's mink coat (that if I have to be honest I would have burned as I hate such stuff) , but I used to wash her meshes with rabbit collar and came out perfect, I also use to wash leather (reverse side, cold water, wool soap)....   so even the ones marked "dry cleaning only" would be safe to be water washed (both by hand or machine) <span id="result_box" class="short_text" lang="en"><span class="hps">with</span> <span class="hps">due attention paid naturally</span></span>, I use to wash just about everything and results are always Perfect.
Second reason I hate "dry/solvent cleaning"  is that I don't think that anything that is not washed with water is really clean.

Attending hotel and catering school we had to wear a suit as a school uniform for normal classes and reception/waiter courses,  suits made out of wool of course...
I used to machine wash (cold/warm water delicate cycle) all  my suits about 1 time every month and half, I had 5 suits and I used to let them to air/rest alternatively using each day one different....
They always came out perfectly and still have them after having using the same  for 4 years.....  first time my neighbor was  shocked to see me hanging outside my wet  suits,  she  was shocked  to see they used to come out nice...she said she always used to send her husband's one (a bank employee)  at dry cleaners as she thought they would have been ruined by water wash....she said she felt silly for having spents lots of money for dry cleaners in all those years.

I just said that as long as you wash them in a right way (cold/lukewarm water and wool cycle and detergent)  they would not get ruined of course...she then started to wash theirs at home too, she only  hand washed them though as she didn't  feel safe to try the machine wash for hers even though she admired my results...she said her machine didn't have a specific cycle for wollens , just a generic delicate cycle that would wash at 50°c.... of course it was wise to don't in her machine.
My ones always been washed in the Filter-flo, she  had an old AEG at the time...now she got a Speed Queen under my suggestion, but her husband now is retired  and don't use suits anymore....

[this post was last edited: 7/17/2013-16:47]
 
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