Anonymous wrote:Some of these comments are wild because the only jeans I've experienced this with were various designer jeans. I've never had this with more inexpensive jeans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. While I appreciate snark as much as the next person, I genuinely don’t understand taking the time to post responses like this. Does anyone have any helpful suggestions?
Ditto.
I prefer dark (black, dark navy jeans), and typically wash them in cold water with a vinegar rinse and/or Lysol Sanitizer rinse, and then air dry. They don’t fade as quickly this way, and usually the first two washes (with vinegar) are the most important to minimize bleeding. Maybe three-five before I’d sit on white upholstery!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try soaking them inside out, in a bucket with cold water, 1 cup white vinegar, and a Tbs or so of sea salt. soak overnight, rinse well with cold water, and air dry.
Anyone remember those white and green Benetton rugby shirts from the 80s? My older sisters had them and did this to get the green dye to set. It works on denim, too.
After that, add vinegar to the rinse cycle of a washer whenever you wash them. Always inside out and always wash on cold.
Thank you. I have a silly question. If you have a front load washer, how do you add the vinegar to the rinse cycle? Is that only possible with top loaders? (I typically just throw detergent pods in the drum before washing a load.)
Anonymous wrote:Try soaking them inside out, in a bucket with cold water, 1 cup white vinegar, and a Tbs or so of sea salt. soak overnight, rinse well with cold water, and air dry.
Anyone remember those white and green Benetton rugby shirts from the 80s? My older sisters had them and did this to get the green dye to set. It works on denim, too.
After that, add vinegar to the rinse cycle of a washer whenever you wash them. Always inside out and always wash on cold.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. While I appreciate snark as much as the next person, I genuinely don’t understand taking the time to post responses like this. Does anyone have any helpful suggestions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My jeans have never leeched dye. What crap pairs did you buy???[/
Most of the premium brands in mid to darker washes come with a tag warning about it. Surprised you’ve never seen that. It’s something in the dye process.
Not premium enough, apparently.
Anonymous wrote:My jeans have never leeched dye. What crap pairs did you buy???[/
Most of the premium brands in mid to darker washes come with a tag warning about it. Surprised you’ve never seen that. It’s something in the dye process.