Spyke
sopuli.xyz

You put them all in because you think it will be fine, I put them all in because I don't care. We are not the same.

149
lemmy.world

Said like a man who didn't have to go to high school gym class with pink Fruit Of The Loom tighty-whities.

29
Korhakareply
sopuli.xyz

Well I guess you're right, I don't have any white underwear.

23

user error. why would you have white underwear in the first place? terrible colour for hiding my skid stains when working under the neighbour's sink

18

I've still heard that you should wash new clothes on their own as they might have residual colour pigment in them which could affect your other clothes. But yeah, things have changed, and for the most part I don't care about that stuff anymore.
Maybe it's because we wash our clothes mostly around 40°C now and with enzymes as opposed to whatever the F they used to do.

77
hactar42reply
lemmy.world

I always wash new things separately now, after a I bought my son a Sonic blanket. That thing covered everything in the washer and dryer with blue fuzz.

34

You should wash all new clothes BEFORE you wear them. They spray them with poison and repellent to protect them from bugs and critters during shipping from across the world.

6
lemmy.blahaj.zone

I've never had issues mixing unlike colors, I think the key is to set the water temp to cold.

64

Yeah someone on tumblr (? Ok i forget where) had a great explanation about the improvements in “clothes-cleaning juice” over the years.

Tl;dr it’s not a problem anymore, usually, but it used to be.

18

Depends on the items and their age, but yes, you should generally be fine.

The last time I had an issue was some coloured pillow cases that bled all over my white bedsheets.

13
lemmy.ml

It never happens. Untill it does. Ask me how I know.

Enjoy your new pink shirts though!

46

Or yellow, or tan, or light grey, or baby blue, or anything striped with white/any of those colors…

7
awful.systems

It must be detergent or washers are easier on clothes. Growing up, all my clothes eventually became the same dirty pink color when I’d wash colors together. These days I just dump everything in and toss in some laundry soap, maybe some softener if we have it around, and I still have clothes that are 20 years old and in regular rotation. Colorful as always.

39
pharreply
lemmy.ml

Its improvement in dyes more than anything, not detergent

34

Yeah, could be. I still have some old stuff though (my grandpas shirt which has got to be 50 years old). I don’t wear it much, but I still wash it when I do..

5
prolereply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

This is the right question. I always use cold water unless something is soiled. Or maybe towels if there's nothing else in there.

I think detergents have gotten good enough to work just as well in cold water, and that's mostly why it's better.

20
4gramsreply
awful.systems

Yeah, cold for everything except whites (they get warm plus bleach). Else these days I do still try to separate them into dark and light colors. Jeans do still fade but it doesn’t transfer to the rest.

9
prolereply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

After switching to black socks years ago, I haven't really had whites in a long time.

6
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Real rule:

You can drop them all together, coz all clothes are so low quality, those won't last long enough to lost colors during mixed washings.

30
Nojareply
sopuli.xyz

Me who wears clothes that are 12+ years old:

also don't use a clothes dryer and your stuff will last way longer

12
Jayjaderreply
jlai.lu

The heat, as @[email protected] already mentioned, won't help - not to mention the inside of some dryers can have a cheese grater effect on the clothing tumbling around inside of it.

6

Afaik heat doesn't really do good to textiles in general

4

I just use a clothes dryer on low or, sometimes, even extra low. There’s an even an air-dry option that works better than just leaving things to hang.

This goes especially for humid climates. My stuff would never in the summer and even in the winter it would take a long time. The button-ups and pants that I do hang to dry take forever to be ready.

2

Some additions.

You can mix colors, just don't add white clothes, especially when the color clothes are new.

3
Ronnoreply
feddit.nl

Then there is someone like me that still wears 5 to 10 year old clothes that still look fresh 🙈

3

I buy mostly Dutch and Belgian brands from a local store. For example brands like Soci3ty, Zilton, Blue Industry.

You can probably do the same near your location, find some local qualitative brands. Usually these are too small to gamble with questionable quality, so they will usually ensure higher quality standards than the mass producers. Meanwhile you also support some local businesses, which is nice in this day and age.

1
lemmy.world

go back few decades and it was a given, dye chemistry has changed since then, so it doesn't happen unless you buy a piece made by someone trying to save a penny on dye

29

Put in a freshly bought red item and something white. Works every time if you want your stuff to be pink.

36
feddit.org

This right here. The hell do you need multiple colors for?

I do prefer dark blue, though.

8
Hudellreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

My personal preference in color is incompatible with the local weather for half of the year.

3

I'm wearing black in winter to catch more heat and also black in the summer to hide the sweat stains. Can't lose

2
ayyyreply
sh.itjust.works

You still have to sort the black turtlenecks from the Slightly Darker Black turtlenecks though.

4

Or you can just leave'em all in and equalise the colours! No more worries, ever! Everything'll be carbon black and that's that!

0
lemmy.world

White clothes and heavily colored stuff with a "wash separately first time" label goes separately. And thats about it 🤷

19

Cold water, separate white items. It really only takes a couple minutes. Eventually even if there isnt an immediate stark change in tint on the item, over time it'll steadily become more and more off-white. It looks noticeably worse imo.

18

How do you define what is "white"?

Pure white things, sure that's easy.

What about a white shirt with blue stripes?

What about things that are light gray?

What about things that are half white and half some other color?

4

Generally, the problem is if you wash brand new synthetic clothing, the dyes will be fresh and leak onto other clothes, this isnt really a problem if you have the same shirt for a long time or buy thriftee clothes

14

one time my red pullover converted one of my white sjirts into a pink one, but otherwise ive got a clean slate in the last 10 years

14
feddit.org

Yes, as far as I know, all machines sold for domestic use here have drums aligned to the X-axis (top-loading with drum doors) or Z-axis (front-loading), never Y. I only saw a quick-spin-drying centrifuge in a swimming pool's hair-drying room.

Edit: in engineering, I almost always see the Y axis as vertical. X is left-right and Z is backward (−)-forward (+) for a right-handed 3D Cartesian system. It's also like this in Super Mario 64.

3
prolereply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

The washer in the photo is top-loading though? Which would be the Y-axis.

All of the washing machines my family owned growing up looked like that.

2
feddit.org

Yup, my photo shows an unusual machine in my country. Neither does it do anything except an express spin cycle nor is it for domestic use.

1
prolereply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

I hadn't seen a side loading washer until I was in high school, if not college. Maybe saw them in stores in high school.

1

Is this not a top loading one? It just looks like a standard one with the agitator stick in the middle, which is i think whats holding the clothes

Like this but an older 2000s model

1
lemmy.world

I have one like that. It's a pain in the ass to grab socks from the bottom because I'm super short.

6

I feel your pain. As a tall person, I hate front loaders cause I can't take anything out of the washer without hurting my back.

3

They’re called top-loaders and they’re so much less efficient that the Energy Star requirements straight up allow them to use more water than a front loader while still being called “high efficiency”.

5
lemmy.world

I thought this was too, until I washed my white work clothes with a bright yellow shirt. Suddenly my white shirts look permanently dirty.

10
Rooster326reply
programming.dev

Going to sound dumb but get some Bluing Dye. The name is a bit of a misnomer. It'll brighten them back up

5

This is the first I've ever heard of this substance. Thank you kind stranger!

3

Which is awesome. Because like the washing machine removes EVERYTHING.

Food? Gone. Cat hairball? Poof. Baby's diaper explosion? Like it never happened.

I think it only really matters if you're an organized freak who even folds their clothes after doing the laundry. The clean clothes aren't gonna get dirty sitting in the clean clothes basket.

8

Do your colors on cold, do your whites on hot, your colors will last longer and your whites won't get so fucking dingy looking. It's not about bleed, it's about taking care of your clothes so they last a while.

6
piefed.social

By reading the comments, TIL that some people wash clothes with warm water. I have never even seen a washing machine that warms water.

1

I have never seen a washing machine that doesn't let you set the temperature first (between 30-90°C). I'm living in the EU.

13
Stametsreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

The vast majority of washing machines do both hot and cold, at least in North America. Hot is the default. The machine doesn't make the water hot though, it just takes hot water from your hot water tank. This means that there are two machines that are running at the same time. You have a hot water tank that is going to be boiling more water and the washing machine that is using the hot water that is being boiled. To use cold water, you typically have to select the cold wash setting on most washers here in North America. In this case, it just takes water from the tap instead of the hot water tank.

10

Some washing machines do also have the ability to heat water above 60°C for sterilisation purposes, as most domestic hot water heaters only do 40-50°C.

5

They don't usually have heating elements, they have hot water hookups and mix the two to achieve a certain temperature.

2

Ours which is at least 30 years old has hot/warm, warm/cold, and cold/cold.

I usually use hot/warm just because it fills faster. It's not warming the water. It's drawing the hot water from the hot water heater. If we use cold cold it will make sure to only draw cold water and it takes awhile. Hot means it just grabs all the water it can.

2

These days, lots of detergents actually work better in cold water. They contain enzymes for dissolving e.g. blood stains, and those enzymes are typically proteins, which fall apart when heated too much. Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe (most?) proteins fall apart around 42°C. This might be simplifying far too much.

But yeah, basically you want to generally wash at 30°C.

1
prolereply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

I have never even seen a washing machine that warms water.

For real?

1
lemmy.zip

Same here, Mexico, no washing machine we ever had fiddles with temperature, and warming your water somethere else and then pouring it would be a pain

1
kkjreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

We don't pour water into our washing machines, we hook them up to plumbing (one to the source water from the mains and one from the water heater, plus one output to the sewage or gray water).

1

I see, we don't have water heaters, we had one at some point but it was plugged only to the shower, I don't know if it broke or if it wasn't cost effctive but we stopped using it ever since.

Washing machines do have a hoose to input water btw

1