• April-June 2012

Silk Cleaning and Care Tips

Silk Cleaning and Care Tips

Silk garments are no longer limited to high-end designer labels or neckties. Everyday silk casual wear for men and women is very popular. We know because we clean a lot of silk garments. It drapes, looks and feels great. But, like other fabrics, silk is susceptible to conditions of wear, stains, and color loss. We have the experience and knowledge to carefully clean all of your silk garments.
In an emergency, should I use club soda to treat the stain?

First, there is nothing special about club soda as a stain remover agent. If you are attempting any do-it-yourself stain treatment just remember this:

BLOT, DON’T RUB. Silk will chafe easily or develop light areas if rubbed while wet. Get the garment to us ASAP.

Should I dryclean or wash my silk garment?

We know that silk responds well to drycleaning. Washing silk at home may result in shrinkage, limpness, and considerable fading. We recommend following the manufacturer’s care label instructions with a reminder that, in most instances, a garment with a washable label can also be safely drycleaned.

I did wash it at home and now look at it. Can you help me?

Regrettably, some ‘washable’ silk dyes do not react well to water. Oftentimes vibrant colors fade in washing, resulting in fading or multi-colored dyes will run into one another. We see it especially when light and darker dyed fabrics are combined. We routinely double check colorfastness before we begin any cleaning process. You should too when washing at home.

From time to time, we can brighten faded colors with a special professional process. However, it is only a temporary fix.

Can you get the underarm stains out?

Well, yes and no. We know how to address this problem and we do. But, sometimes perspiration and other conditions of wear result in a permanent color change.

Also, contact with chloride salts weaken silk. In addition to perspiration, chloride salts are present in many types of beverages, food, medicines, and yes, salt water. The most common type of chloride damage is the result from perspiration or contact with an antiperspirant.

If you perspire in it, clean the garment as soon as possible. This may help avoid permanent staining, irreversible fabric damage, color loss, or color changes. Use of underarm shields may minimize some of these conditions.

It looks like the color is gone in certain areas. What happened?

Loss of color in localized areas usually occurs because the fabric came in contact with a substance during consumer use. Contact with any of the following can cause discoloration:

• Hand sanitizers

• Body sprays

• Deodorants and other consumer and household products

• Moisturizers and other skin care products

• Alcohol

• Perfume or cologne

• Hair spray

• Shampoo

• Home detergents and dish liquids

• Toothpaste

• Facial cleansers

• Products containing chlorine

• Mouthwash and other astringents

My sueded silk looks lighter in some areas and darker in others. What’s going on?

Sueded silk refers to a slightly brushed fabric finish which makes the fabric feel and look like velvet suede.

Areas that are repeatedly rubbed during wear may lose this finish, creating lighter areas or a shaded appearance. We typically see this occurrence in the seat, waist, inner thigh, elbows, or other areas of wear. The edges or folds at the lapels, hems, collar, and cuff may show loss of the sueded finish as well.

Care Suggestions

  • Apply perfume, cologne, deodorant, and hair spray before dressing to prevent color loss and staining.
  • Exercise great caution with household products. It’s almost a sure-fire way to ruin a terrific garment if
    left untreated.
  • Never use chlorine bleach or products containing chlorine on silk. It will permanently change the color.
  • Store garments in a dark area. Long exposure to sunlight or even strong lights can cause streaks and fading.
  • Blot, don’t rub silk when wet.
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Clothing Care Symbols Explained

Have you ever wondered what those care symbols on your clothing mean?  We want to help eliminate your confusion, print this Clothing Care Symbol Guide to help you care for your clothing.

 

Clothing Care Symbol Guide

 

 

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A Brief History of Laundry

 

Making Soap

Boiling Laundry

Once upon a time doing laundry wasn’t as easy as it was now. There weren’t many soaps and detergents in the stores to choose from; if you wanted soap you had to make soap. Making soap wasn’t, interestingly enough, a clean job. Fat had to be obtained, usually by rendering it from animals. Lard, beef tallow, bacon grease and other fats were saved from butchering and cooking and used for soap making.

To make soap, the fat had to be “saponified” or made into soap using lye. Lye wasn’t easily obtained either- it often had to be made using ashes saved from the fireplace or outdoor fires.Then, in an often dangerous process, the caustic lye and the fat were cooked together and stirred until soap was produced. This then had to be molded and cured before it could be cut and used.

There were other methods of washing clothing as well. There is the time honored custom of beating clothing on rocks in the river and there is the washboard, tub and mangle method.

 

Antique Iron

After the clothing was washed and dried- by hanging out (How did that work in the winter or in rainy weather?) it then had to be pressed. “Irons in the fire” is more than just an old phrase, it is a literal description of how irons were heated to press clothing. Another old phrase from the era is, “OUCH! That’s hot!”

Progress is good.

 

 

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Save $$$ on Wedding Gown Preservation NOW!!

We know everyone has taken a battering in this economy. We want to help. Your wedding gown was an investment in your future, make sure it lasts for a lifetime.Right now wedding gown preservation is only $125!!

Wedding gown preservation from Sun Ray Cleaners

When you preserve your dress with Sun Ray Cleaners, you get more than just a dress wrapped in tissue and boxed. Our process leaves your dress clean and guaranteed for life against oxidation, insect damage. Your dress and accessories are cleaned and boxed carefully in a preservation chest, then all the oxygen is removed and the chest is filled with an inert gas. We then place your inner display chest in a larger outer box to protect it even further.

We can offer lower prices because we have lower overhead. Your dress isn’t shipped across the country to some facility, we process it right here locally.You aren’t paying for shipping and advertising, just quality professional preservation services.

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Yard Sale This Weekend!

Yard Sale

Friday September 30- 8 am- 3pm
Saturday October 1 8 am- 1 pm

3500 Victory Drive Columbus Georgia


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