Anonymous wrote:I wash my kids' coats/hoodies weekly, but my own only get washed at the end of the season. My nice wool coat gets drycleaned once every few years, but I only wear it about 3 times a year.
If you wash those puffy coats too often they lose all warmth! They aren't coming in direct contact with skin, so I don't see why an adult needs to wash them more than 1-2 times a season.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you really sweating through all the layers of your clothes and into your coat? I do wash my coat occasionally as the sleeves get dirty etc but can not imagine how a coat can smell so badly as people as describing. I mean sure a kid who is playing at recess but I am not running around. In the winter I typically have 2 layers on under my coat.
I think this must be like the people who can smell “outside.” That’s not shade, I believe them, I’m just not one of them.
Do you ever walk into a place that is cooking on a flat top grill? Fabric picks up those odors.
Okay! Chillax, man. I wash the coats I wear the most more frequently. I’m struggling to think of the last time I had a coat and flat top grill experience but I’ll be on the lookout.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My driving coat or other garments that get minimal wear/exposure to outside elements get cleaned at the end of the season and stored. My daily-wear coat(s) get cleaned when they get dirty, and then at the end of the season before being stored.
And I handwash my wool. Dry cleaning is nasty.
You hand wash an ankle length wool coat? I cannot even imagine how heavy and awkward that is.
Anonymous wrote:I wash all my coats at least once a year. The ones that can go in the washing machine, I do myself. The others get dry cleaned at end of the season.
Riding the subway in the winter in NYC, there is so much odor coming from people's disgustingly dirty coats....
Anonymous wrote:I do, but by the smell of some people’s coats they don’t. I wash mine if I go into a deli or other Sri my restaurant.
Anonymous wrote:My driving coat or other garments that get minimal wear/exposure to outside elements get cleaned at the end of the season and stored. My daily-wear coat(s) get cleaned when they get dirty, and then at the end of the season before being stored.
And I handwash my wool. Dry cleaning is nasty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends on the coat.
You can’t just wash the waterproof parkas, you have to do the whole waterproofing rigmarole. I do it more often with the kids coats.
I have a puffer I wear all the time that I wash more often and just accept it’s not really waterproof any more. Same with kid coats.
Please tell me how to do this! I ruined an expensive, wonderful rain jacket by putting it in the washing machine.
Anonymous wrote:My driving coat or other garments that get minimal wear/exposure to outside elements get cleaned at the end of the season and stored. My daily-wear coat(s) get cleaned when they get dirty, and then at the end of the season before being stored.
And I handwash my wool. Dry cleaning is nasty.