IH-717-KHA - 9oz Mercerised Selvedge Cotton Chinos - Khaki
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Some pre and post measurements for those interested.
Pre
-waist: 35.5"
-thigh: 13"
-Inseam: 36"
-hem: 8.8"Post (warm soak, light agitation, machine dried on medium heat)
-waist: 34"
-thigh: just over 12.75"
-inseam: 34.75"
-hem: 8.5" -
Is the color on this chino lighter/cooler than the khaki 711?
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Is the color on this chino lighter/cooler than the khaki 711?
711 on the left, 717 on the right
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If anyone's interested, German retailer Burg & Schild has sizes 31 and 32 on sale.
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Good afternoon everyone!
Today, for the first time in my life, I bought unshrunk trousers.
Please someone teach me how to deal with them properly.
One of these days they should come to me and I don't know what I need to do with them.
Do you need to walk in them first, and then soak them in warm water?
Or not?
I will be very grateful for the correct instruction!
Thank you in advance! -
@Mikhail my way of handling these kinda trousers is to get all of the shrink out before even wearing them. So you can soak them in a tub or in a large bucket in warm water. Like 30 or 40 degrees celcius no detergent. Leave it in there for like a hour drip dry and wear it! Likely it will shrink even a little more when you first gonna give them a wash but most shrinkage will be out!
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Thank you very much and have a great weekend!
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@Mikhail Soaking does not shrink the material, you will need to agitate them (like washing them in a machine) to get them to shrink.
I have not had these pants and am hesitatant to comment, but the above advice has that bit of information missing.
Personally, I would wash them in a machine, medium heat, low or no spin to get them to shrink, hang to dry and then wear them from there.
That is how I wash most of my clothing.
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@Mikhail This a post from @Giles that goes into detail of what shrinkage is:
Yarns and/or fabrics are not fixed materials. They consist of separate fibres that will stretch when exposed to tension, i.e. they elongate during the process of being made into cloth (during spinning, weaving, bleaching, dyeing and the various finishing processes, yarns and cloth are under continuous tension). Some or all of this stretch within the fabric is retained in the post-loom fabric because of friction between the fibres and the yarns.
The stretch that occurs can be eliminated when the friction within the fabric is reduced. This will happen during soaking and/or washing, where both water and soap act as lubricants. The lubricants, along with the mechanical action of the washer, help the fibres relax and contract (shrink) back to their original length.
One of the reasons that dry cleaning does not shrink natural fabrics is that the friction within the fabric is not reduced by dampening.