When I was younger and still worked in hospitals I used to use Mrs. Stewart's bluing on my white cotton lab coats and my all-cotton blue scrubs. I also used to starch these in the washer before ironing, with liquid starch.
I got away from the practice about 25 years ago when I switched to business suits and no longer got down-and-dirty in hospitals. My dress shirts go through the dry cleaner/laundry.
Does anyone on here still use bluing? I know it's still made but people seem to have moved away from it. Is it because whiteners in our modern detergents negate the value or necessity for it? I do have a friend who's a real blue jean lover, who still washes his jeans with a little bluing.
I guess I've just gone the direction of others, using either spray starch or sizing rather than starching in the washer. Does anyone on here still do that? I noticed in the store on the bottle of starch that I saw, that it doesn't even mention washer starching any more. I was doing it in one of my GE Filter-Flo washers; is there any way to do that in a front loader?
I got away from the practice about 25 years ago when I switched to business suits and no longer got down-and-dirty in hospitals. My dress shirts go through the dry cleaner/laundry.
Does anyone on here still use bluing? I know it's still made but people seem to have moved away from it. Is it because whiteners in our modern detergents negate the value or necessity for it? I do have a friend who's a real blue jean lover, who still washes his jeans with a little bluing.
I guess I've just gone the direction of others, using either spray starch or sizing rather than starching in the washer. Does anyone on here still do that? I noticed in the store on the bottle of starch that I saw, that it doesn't even mention washer starching any more. I was doing it in one of my GE Filter-Flo washers; is there any way to do that in a front loader?