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Doing Laundry with cold water.

(82 Posts)
littleflo Tue 08-Mar-22 11:43:54

I have been reading about saving money and saving the environment at the same time. One suggestion was to wash lightly soiled items in cold water.

This seems more wide spread than I thought. Not only that but some do not use laundry detergent. Do any GNs do the same?

Grandmajean Tue 08-Mar-22 11:46:48

Have tried all these environment saving tips re washing. I don't think anything gets clean so stopped. I also don't understand these ads where everyone gets covered in mud and chucks the clothes in a machine with the wonder tablet . Has never worked for me.

maddyone Tue 08-Mar-22 11:58:00

I use 30 degree temperature for washes, and a well known biological washing liquid, colour for coloured garments and white for white garments. I use a reputable softener and some a laundry disinfectant if necessary. My washing is always clean and fresh. Line dry if possible, if not I use the dryer. DH cleans the washing machine with the steam cleaner every few weeks.

wildswan16 Tue 08-Mar-22 12:01:30

I wash at 30 with a laundry egg. Everything comes out perfectly clean.

I don't suppose I could do it if I was washing for a car mechanic or a farmer - but for a retired female it works perfectly well.

M0nica Tue 08-Mar-22 12:03:15

I stick to hot water and a soap based detergent. I have a skin allergies and like to keep washing simple.

I remain unconvinced that using caustic chemical based detergents, WM disinfectants (isn't that a contradiction in terms) is more environmentally benign that just heating the water a bit more and using less damaging detergents.

Farzanah Tue 08-Mar-22 13:42:32

Me too MOnica. My towels used to smell after washing regularly on 30 degree which isn’t hot enough to kill bacteria, but not necessary to use all the other chemical rubbish which is advertised to make washing nicer, perfumed etc.

Summerlove Tue 08-Mar-22 13:52:40

The only things that don’t get washed in cold are sheets and towels.

That’s always been the way in my house

lemsip Tue 08-Mar-22 14:14:48

well,so long as we never go back to this! ha ha have a look.

www.countrylife.co.uk/comment-opinion/curious-questions-why-did-people-used-to-wash-clothes-in-urine-217861#:~:text=One%20of%20the%20most%20pressing,into%20the%2019th%20century.

www.countrylife.co.uk/comment-opinion/curious-questions-why-did-people-used-to-wash-clothes-in-urine-217861#:~:text=One%20of%20the%20most%20pressing,into%20the%2019th%20century.

In The Complete Chamber Maid (1677), Hannah Woolley described how to deal with particularly obstinate stains with a sequence to be carried out prior to washing the item:

‘Lay it all night in urine, rub all the spots in the urine as if you were washing in water; then lay it in more urine another night and then rub it again, and so do until they [stains] be quite out.’

62Granny Tue 08-Mar-22 14:32:05

I have a quick wash setting on my machine that washes lightly soiled clothes in 15 mins I use this for everything except towels and bedding. Now we are retired we keep the same clothes on around the house for the week unless we have been particularly messy. I change if I am going out but only wash clothes when they need it .

Hetty58 Tue 08-Mar-22 14:49:51

I have allergies aggravated by soap or detergent so, like wildswan, I use a laundry egg, but at 20 degrees. A quick wash doesn't do it, so I use a medium or long one.

Anything that's stained or dirty gets soaked (not in pee) in washing soda and I use half a cup of white vinegar as softener. It all comes out lovely.

I think hot washes are a UK thing. In NZ, everyone seems to cold wash.

BlueBelle Tue 08-Mar-22 14:53:42

I wash everything at 30 but then I live alone and like Prince Andrew how ever hot it gets I do not sweat ( even when I lived in the tropics)
and I don’t do manual work apart from gardening which is natural stuff anyway, my towels dry a daily washed body and out in the wind and sun so never smell bad

Hetty58 Tue 08-Mar-22 14:57:29

(I think it must be easier and cheaper to use a laundry sanitiser on towels etc. rather than heating the water to 60 degrees.)

Caleo Tue 08-Mar-22 16:13:05

Steeping in urine may be useful for killing the sort of bacteria that don't tolerate acid. I sometimes rinse in vinegar and water to deodorise the washing.

M0nica Tue 08-Mar-22 16:33:17

Hetty58 why?

Farzanah Tue 08-Mar-22 17:04:17

Ha has. I read sleeping in urine.

Georgesgran Tue 08-Mar-22 17:08:05

I wash most things at 30. I bought soap nuts to use - 4 or 5 in the little bag provided does 4 washes. The amount I bought should last years too.

GagaJo Tue 08-Mar-22 21:07:14

I wash most clothes without detergent. Just water gets them perfectly clean. I discovered this years ago when my black clothes were gradually being faded by the powder I used.

However, anything with obvious dirt gets soap powder added and stains are treated. Bedding I always use soap powder on and hang outside.

freedomfromthepast Tue 08-Mar-22 21:09:12

I was everything but my whites in cold water and with about half the recommended detergent. Whites get washed in hot water, but no bleach, I cant stand the smell.

Mollygo Tue 08-Mar-22 22:49:22

Many people, including me have been washing at 30° for ages. If washing in cold water works for you that’s great. I’ve tried it a couple of times, then had to use more water rewashing the clothes.
I haven’t washed stuff in really hot water since towelling nappies when my children were small.
I do wonder why washing machines have lots of hot wash programs.

Nannytopsy Tue 08-Mar-22 23:03:56

Just washed a new baby’s babygro at 30c and the yellow stain from a leaked nappy is still there. That never happened when mine were small. I now need to stain remove and re wash.

Esspee Tue 08-Mar-22 23:24:04

I wash with cold water and half the recommended amount of detergent. Towels and sheets get the occasional hot wash. Very dirty items or the odd stain such as curry get treated with Vanish.
My laundry looks sparkling in the sunshine which incidentally is great at getting rid of stains.

V3ra Tue 08-Mar-22 23:48:11

My clothes which barely get dirty are washed at 30c on a quick programme.
My husband's clothes which get dirtier are washed on a 40c longer cycle.
Sheets are washed on a 60c steam programme.
We use lots of hand towels and flannels and these are washed at 90c on a cotton programme.
I use liquid detergent, colour or the biological version for whites, or a handwash liquid for delicates and jumpers. This goes straight in the drum.
I don't use fabric softener as I don't like the way it leaves a messy residue in the dispenser drawer.
I use the washing machine disinfectant for the dog's blanket.
Occasionally I put my coats through a wash and then use a re-waterproofing solution in the washing machine.
I dry on a big clothes horse either indoors, with a dehumidifier running, or outside in good weather.
I use a tumble dryer to air the towels and dry clothes that would otherwise need ironing.
I used to wash for five people, now it's only two of us but it still seems never-ending!
We both have clean clothes every day as we are still working, though I will wear the same cardigan for two, or three days max, over a clean jumper.
My son still lives here but he does all his own laundry.
My utility room is a bit of a production line ?

Pepper59 Wed 09-Mar-22 02:53:05

I won't wash anything in cold water, it doesn't kill the bacteria and clothing begins to smell. 60 degrees for bedding and towels, 40 for the rest. Yes, it's great, we are all jumping through hoops to save the world, while other countries carry on regardless. I'm fed up with 'activists ' lecturing us all when, in this country, it's people here who are actually doing something. How about they go and lecture the countries that aren't and don't care either.

MissAdventure Wed 09-Mar-22 03:09:03

A cool wash isn't enough for our washing.
The lightly soiled stuff goes into the wash basket with the dirtier stuff anyway, so it's all minging pretty soiled when it gets done.

Granmarderby10 Wed 09-Mar-22 03:30:49

This is a very interesting thread.
One thing I have noticed is if I wash a load of white cotton things on a 90 degree wash (or indeed anything on a hot wash) the things will retain that gorgeous just washed freshness even if left wet in a basket waiting for a dry day or space on the clothes horse

whereas synthetics literally stink to high heaven if not dried straight away and and other items washed at lower than say 60 degrees sometimes smell like damp dishcloths.

I do clean the machine and dispenser draw regularly and have lately been using a product called fabulosa which is (strangely described as a laundry cleanser, yet goes into the fabric conditioner slot of the machine. A slight improvement.

Also is it just me that finds the original blue Comfortfabric conditioner absolutely noxious?
So bad I actually threw the bottle away and can detect that particular scent anywhere.
It used to be pleasant, what have they done to it?