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  • A whole new spin on laundry - no rinse - delicate wash for your quilts and wool mats

  • A whole new spin on laundry - no rinse - delicate wash for your quilts and wool mats

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    Old 12-13-2018, 09:05 AM
      #11  
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    Thanks for the warning about it having lanolin. I have family members who are allergic to lanolin, so I will definitely avoid this product!
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    Old 12-13-2018, 09:07 AM
      #12  
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    it is probably all good advice, but giving instructions for out of the ordinary washing materials and the lay it flat, and ever so gentle rocking in a bath tub and no spin cycle, and color catchers, to me, cancel out the idea of a quilt for a gift, made with love. Tell them to use it with abandon, and joy, and warmth, wash and wear, and when it wears out I'll make another one.
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    Old 12-13-2018, 09:38 AM
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    I have washed mine in an old washer with agitator and been fine. now i have a GE top loader again but it hardly agitates at all. does a bit, stops, does a bit, stops. my clothes come out clean and my quilts do too. in good shape also. I think she was just plain rough on the quilts and if you make another one, make it a rag quilt or at least something sturdy, very sturdy.
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    Old 12-13-2018, 10:35 AM
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    Originally Posted by PatriceJ
    that would be great except most modern washers don't let you fill the tub with water.
    mine will not let me decide for myself how much water i want to use.
    even the so-called "deep water wash" is a bad joke.

    i tried filling it manually, using a garden hose.
    did not turn on the washer.
    after a few minutes, the washer turned itself on and drained/spun out all the water.
    Haha! Yeah, well it can't think for itself if I unplug it, lol. My front loader doesn't just spin dry. That's a lie it perpetrates. It sprays it with cold water, *then* spins and dries. But if I turn off the cold water, it doesn't notice, and spins it like I wanted it to all along. However, if I forget to turn the water back on, and someone else comes along to do aload of laundry, it has a specific error code for "Hey! I'm tryna do laundry here!" DDIL just found out the other day.
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    Old 12-13-2018, 10:40 AM
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    Originally Posted by d.rickman

    Now, when I make quilts for friends and family, I always include a couple of color catchers, and a small bottle of this Eucalan laundry product I found when we travelled across Canada. The sheep business staff
    I've heard of Eucalan from that former life in woolensland, but I've never used it in person, and somehow I missed that it was no rinse. I invented a wool wash for use with woolen diaper soakers, which I thought was kind of like it, and it might be, but I think mine is probably much more lanoliny. Mines not really for washing, its for re-lanolining/ So, definitely not a Peckish-approved product, right?
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    Old 12-13-2018, 11:02 AM
      #16  
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    I have an old top loading washer plumbed up outside my back door which I use for washing quilts and fabric as my front loader is too small for my quilts. I've never had a problem with the batting seperating etc, my quilts wash and wear just fine but then I usually do quite close allover quilting so perhaps that's the key. I do use a woollen wash detergent but it is one easily found in the supermarkets and is nothing "special". My exception to this is I advise when I gift a table runner that it be gently hand washed in cool water and laid flat to dry then ironed/pressed.
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    Old 12-13-2018, 02:01 PM
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    My quilts do great with the way I launder them. I would never hand launder any size quilt. Would be absolutely impossible to wring water out, rinse and wring water out again.
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    Old 12-13-2018, 03:24 PM
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    Originally Posted by Jingle
    My quilts do great with the way I launder them. I would never hand launder any size quilt. Would be absolutely impossible to wring water out, rinse and wring water out again.
    What I think too.
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    Old 12-13-2018, 03:47 PM
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    Eucalan is a good product. Comparable to Woolite, except you can't use Woolite on wool. Go figure. Euclan is great for washing yarn too. And a bit less expensive at WM.

    My takeaway: I should Really be appreciating my 20 yr old top loading washer much more than I have been. After all the washer comments on QB lately, I'm in no hurry to replace it! Fingers crossed it lasts another 20 yrs. Like old wine and old cars.

    Last edited by mindless; 12-13-2018 at 03:50 PM.
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    Old 12-13-2018, 06:17 PM
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    Mindless said:

    My takeaway: I should Really be appreciating my 20 yr old top loading washer much more than I have been. After all the washer comments on QB lately, I'm in no hurry to replace it! Fingers crossed it lasts another 20 yrs. Like old wine and old cars.
    [/QUOTE]

    Me too!! I have a 20+ year old top loader. 4 different load levels, I can manually let the water go, double spin, and have to remember to close the lid or it will just sit there and soak!
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