Care For Your (Denim/ Wool/ Cotton)
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When you do as much physical shit as me - yes. Plus, I am often kneeling in serious dirt, so apart from stopping me busting through the knee, it helps no engrain the knees with stuff that is almost impossible to get out. That said, I only do it in the privacy of my own home
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I'm totally with you Giles. Wearing knee pads when you do a lot of physical work on your knees is just as smart as wearing a seat belt when you drive a car or a helmet when you ride a motorcycle. You can concentrate better on the task at hand because it's more comfortable. You reduce the pain and the risk of injury and lastly you prolong the life of your jeans. A man's gotta know when to be smart and when to be handsome.
Till
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xpost - grooming thread got carried away. For those who are interested in hand washing your jeans
Using Dr. Bronners bar soap.
Soak while wearing, apply while wearing ..rinse while wearing
take off and rinse in soapy water plus repeat cleaning dirty parts again (cuffs, pocket openings)
rinse again, thouroughly, hangdry
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she meant when you clean them. lol. soak for 30 min cold if too tight, but i say soak hot->warm for the 45-1hr and then feel the pain of the stretch! it hurts SOOO GOOD!
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Yes, use either cedar blocks (or actually use shelves made of cedar wood) or use the aleppo soap. Naphta balls are killer. My gf's closet is a gas chamber. Nothing would survive in there. I took 80% of what she put in there out and sealed it in ziploc bags and it still reeks. There are perfumed mothballs that are supposed to be not that bad but I haven't tried those yet. One of the main things is to wash your stuff regularly. When you start accumulating pullovers it is well possible that you don't wear one for more than a year. In that case you should still wash it.
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Moths don't eat cotton. They prefer the protein (keratin) in animal fibers. Silverfish like starch and will therefore eat cotton. Also, the larvae of some beetles also like cotton.
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Moths don't eat cotton. They prefer the protein (keratin) in animal fibers. Silverfish like starch and will therefore eat cotton. Also, the larvae of some beetles also like cotton.
That's interesting. I wonder what it was that put holes in my t-shirts then? I know for sure I have no silverfish in my room. Beetle larvae perhaps? Which kind to look for? Anyway, that's interesting and might explain why they like cashmere.
Beatle, it smells delicious. Very fresh and manly. Not much of the smell stays on the skin, though, even if the soap smells quite strongly.
Stewart, apparently the higher the laurel oil content the better. The one I got here has 30%. Normal is 15%; figures range from 5-40%. Hard to find in the US even online. I ran into mine in an old school German store. In England it should be possible. In Germany and France it should be rather easy to get. Prices I've seen are around 7-10$ for a 150-220 gram piece. The higher percentage laurel is allegedly very nice for shaving, too. I didn't try it yet. Currently working on perfecting the lather with my shave cream and new brush.
And, yes, there are liquid and flake versions. Good for washing.
Till
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Moths do indeed feast on cotton
Clothes moths larvae feast on woolens and any other animal-based fibers, including feathers and furs. Sometimes synthetic fabrics will suffer clothes moth damage too, if the fabric is a wool blend.
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/528489/are_bugs_eating_holes_in_your_clothes.html
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Solution
Line your closet or storage area with cedar wood. This is the best way to keep moths away.
Step 2
Purchase cedar bags from your dry cleaner. These bags can be used to hang over certain items, such as wool garments, to keep moths out.
Step 3
Put moth or cedar balls in your closet or storage area.
what also helps - little bags filled with Lavender
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Moths do indeed feast on cotton
Clothes moths larvae feast on woolens and any other animal-based fibers, including feathers and furs. Sometimes synthetic fabrics will suffer clothes moth damage too, if the fabric is a wool blend.
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/528489/are_bugs_eating_holes_in_your_clothes.html
Cotton is not a synthetic fabric. Nowhere in that article does it say that moths feed on cotton (unless it is a blend). Since jeans are 100% cotton, moths will not touch them.
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That's interesting. I wonder what it was that put holes in my t-shirts then? I know for sure I have no silverfish in my room. Beetle larvae perhaps? Which kind to look for? Anyway, that's interesting and might explain why they like cashmere.
The carpet beetle is known to eat cotton
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DermestidaeHoles in t-shirts can also be caused from your washing machine. This can happen if there is rough metal in the drum. It can also happen if the clothes penetrate the small holes too far while spinning and rub against something behind the drum. Front loaders with a washer and dryer together are notorious for this and was the cause of holes in my t-shirts before I realized what was happening and got rid of the machine.