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Advice please. How often do others wash their duvets and pillows?

(94 Posts)
Tinygranma Sat 13-Jan-24 11:17:57

Good morning to all you wise Gransnetters! I used to take my duvets and pillows to the launderette on a yearly basis. Covid
put a stop to that and as the cost has risen considerably I air them on the line in the garden as they are too big to fit in my washing machine. My family who stayed for three weeks over Christmas have now left so I have just hung the duvets out. I was wondering what other gransnetters do with their duvets and pillows? They have all had covers on them which I have already washed and dried. Hope you all have a good day!

Damdee Wed 31-Jan-24 12:37:54

Boz, thanks for that. I have never heard of coverless duvets but sounds great. Did you mean Nightlark not Nightowl?

Caleo Wed 31-Jan-24 12:29:52

I wash my coverless duvets like they were bedsheets. I wash pillow cases more frequently than I wash the duvets. I prefer cheap throwaway pillows that go into clumps if they are washed.

MissAdventure Wed 31-Jan-24 12:16:31

I just do whatever I want, whenever I feel up to doing it.
I don't have a routine anymore. 🙂

paris123 Wed 31-Jan-24 12:11:59

HelterSkelter1

In the winter I use brushed cotton duvet covers and a brushed cotton flat sheet under the duvet. Sooo cosy. The flat sheet gets washed once a week or so. And the duvet cover every couple of months or so. I figure with the sheet and clean me in my clean PJs the covers dont need washing more often.

They take longer to dry as well being thicker all cotton unlike the poly cotton summer duvet covers.
My mother sent all her bedding and towels to a laundry when I was young. I dont think it could have been expensive as we were not well off. I wish we had a launderette in our town. The only one closed some few years ago.

yes l forgot to say all my winter sheets are flanelette and cotton sheets for summer, just like my mother used. She too sent of all bedding etc to outside company to be laundered as in those days the charges was very low.They were so starched l remember as a child l was facinated trying to open them up when helping mom make the beds lol.

paris123 Wed 31-Jan-24 12:04:54

We use sheets under our duvet which have covers on. We top and tail the sheets like my mother used to do and we put clean duvet covers on every fortnight. l have a large collection of duvet covers, seasonal prints as i'm stuck in bed a lot so like to have a nice change. At moment got a lovely blue snow scene with wolves.We will change covers this Friday (Bedroom cleaning Day) )to my red tartan set. Set before these was my lovely snowmen cover. We wash our duvets and pillows once a year in summer and we air them weekly, weather permitting.
We use our old clean duvets under the bottom sheets starting Oct to April (again washed in summer with main duvet) as they act as a great heat insulator and so comfy and cozy on the mattress during the winter.

Coolbreeze Mon 22-Jan-24 04:59:15

fancythat

Guest pillows - the pillowcases I wash frequently. Eventually go to multiple covers.
Then throw pillows early, as have never found a successful, non expensive way to wash them.

Duvets - hand wash in bath.

^ duvets -hand wash in the bath ^ surly that would be a hard backbreaking job !

I’d rather buy new than to pay at the laundry , pillows , especially, are not expensive to buy , I just bought pair of lovely soft comfy pillows at Asda for less than £10 .

Tinygranma…please don’t delete your account, it’s not worth it just because of some smart alec , there are a lot of those about , best take no notice.

grannyactivist Sun 21-Jan-24 23:25:02

I change bedding every week, or between visitors on the guest beds. Because we have so many people staying throughout the year I use thick pillow protectors and mattress covers to try to prolong their life, but still wash pillows every three months or so (sometimes the become misshapen and get thrown out though). Lightweight duvets are washed at changeover from summer to autumn and then the others are washed at the changeover to summer.

We’ve recently lost the only launderette in our town, so I think a local laundry will be doing them next year.

I’ve had three grandsons staying over the weekend, so tomorrow I hope to utilise the wind to get my washing dry. 💨

grandMattie Sun 21-Jan-24 22:24:18

I change my bed every week or fortnight in winter.
My feather pillows and feather duvet get thrown onto a hot cycle in the tumble dryer every 3-6 months. The heat kills ant nasties and the tumbling gets rid of the dust, etc.

Joseann Sun 21-Jan-24 22:01:06

Thanks Witzend.

Witzend Sun 21-Jan-24 18:53:48

Joseann

I have a query ..... is it OK to dry clean duvets? Does the process not use chemicals that can affect the filling materials and be detrimental to health?

No, please don’t! The fumes from the dry cleaning agents are toxic, and will still be present for a while.

silverlining48 Sun 21-Jan-24 18:43:59

I used to change my sheets whenever I remembered which could have been up to 6 weekly, and was ok with that until
I read about grands changing bedding fortnightly or even weekly ( omg) !
So I p have since made the effort to do it fortnightly, but have a sheet under the quilt so only change the sheets and pillowcases regularly and leave the quilt Cover til the sun shines…..yes it may be a wait.
am short and the quilts are king size so I hate the process often getting lost inside them.
Believe it or not laundry is probably my favourite household job and I have never seen a bedbug. Thank goodness 😅

Serendipity22 Sun 21-Jan-24 08:54:39

For goodness sake, she is only putting it out there, isn't that what Gransnet is all about ?

Tinygranma don't leave..... start a thread on what the heck you like.

V3ra Sun 21-Jan-24 01:07:14

I thought it was a good idea to have the duvet in two covers

MayBee70 I have thick white brushed-cotton covers on my duvets, then the normal covers on top.

jeanie99 Sun 21-Jan-24 00:29:40

If you are happy with your cleaning routine it doesn't matter whatever what others do.

HelterSkelter1 Sun 14-Jan-24 07:40:27

In the winter I use brushed cotton duvet covers and a brushed cotton flat sheet under the duvet. Sooo cosy. The flat sheet gets washed once a week or so. And the duvet cover every couple of months or so. I figure with the sheet and clean me in my clean PJs the covers dont need washing more often.

They take longer to dry as well being thicker all cotton unlike the poly cotton summer duvet covers.
My mother sent all her bedding and towels to a laundry when I was young. I dont think it could have been expensive as we were not well off. I wish we had a launderette in our town. The only one closed some few years ago.

Maggiemaybe Sat 13-Jan-24 23:48:43

I hope you’re still with us, OP. We’re not that bad when you get used to us! smile

I can just manage to fit my duvets into the washing machine and I wash and line dry them and all the pillows once each summer. The duvet covers, sheet and pillow cases get washed every week, but having read some of the replies I’m wondering if fortnightly would do. hmm I’m always looking for ways of saving resources for environmental reasons, and as far as I’m concerned you’re never too old to learn something new.

mumofmadboys Sat 13-Jan-24 22:58:37

Tinygranma please don't leave gransnet. The vast majority of people on the site are friendly and helpful honestly.

Callistemon21 Sat 13-Jan-24 22:36:33

Joseann

I have a query ..... is it OK to dry clean duvets? Does the process not use chemicals that can affect the filling materials and be detrimental to health?

No, it's not ok but I think some cleaners will wash them.

Doodledog Sat 13-Jan-24 22:35:46

I’m another convert to coverless duvets, and agree that the Nightowl ones are lovely. They aren’t just duvets with no covers, incidentally - they come in different colours and look nice as well as being practical and easy to launder.

Joseann Sat 13-Jan-24 22:04:01

I have a query ..... is it OK to dry clean duvets? Does the process not use chemicals that can affect the filling materials and be detrimental to health?

SueDonim Sat 13-Jan-24 22:02:08

I took a duvet to be cleaned recently, at a place within a supermarket. I went to collect it several times but it got lost in the system - it had been given the wrong colour ticket and was last heard of in Dundee, of all places! 🤣 The upshot was, I was told to buy myself a replacement, the cost of which they refunded in full and I was given some free dry-cleaning as well. 👍

Usually, I’ll air a duvet outside but like an earlier poster, I’ve mostly moved over to washable, coverless duvets. It make bed-changing so much faster.

Overthemoongran Sat 13-Jan-24 21:11:50

All bedding gets changed weekly. Duvets are dry cleaned at the end of winter and spring - although it’s getting to be cheaper to buy new ones. I wash all the pillows in the summer on one of those VERY hot days we get these days. I use pillow protectors & wash those every couple of months.

AreWeThereYet Sat 13-Jan-24 20:57:30

Winter/Summer duvets get dry cleaned at the end of the season when they're changed. In Summer get an airing in the sunshine every now and again. Our neighbour hangs hers out of the window. Our washer has a steam clean so pillows get a clean now and again and hung on the line to dry off.

Callistemon21 Sat 13-Jan-24 20:42:09

Putting it in the freezer if there's room could also work!

Delila Sat 13-Jan-24 20:31:33

Even at “our” age many of us aren’t domestic goddesses and I’m always interested & often grateful for comments on topics like this.

I think hanging a duvet over the line in recent freezing temperatures will get rid of most nasties as efficiently as summer sun.