Sensitive Skin
Having allergies is no fun, and being allergic to products in your own home can be more than frustrating. If you notice that you get itchy or irritated skin after you wash your clothes, you may have developed a reaction to one or more of the ingredients in your detergent. Allergies can develop later in life, and they can also change, so something that never bothered you before can become an irritant out of the blue. Fortunately there are plenty of laundry detergents that are dye-free, scent-free, and hypoallergenic and should work for sensitive skin.
Choosing A Sensitive Skin Laundry Detergent
Venture to the grocery store and look through the laundry detergent selections, remembering that some manufacturers have the words "free" "clear" or “gentle” on their bottles signifying that they are a dye-free or scent-free product. Or look for the specific words "for sensitive skin" on the bottle.
Another option is to use baby laundry detergent. It may sound silly, but there are certain detergents for infants that take sensitive skin into account and clean just as well as regular ones. Many children develop skin irritations or eczema when they're infants, and sometimes it can be minimized by washing clothes in this detergent.
Hypoallergenic Laundry Detergent—Better Safe Than Itchy
Having a hypoallergenic laundry detergent on hand can be useful even if you don’t have sensitive skin, for times when you have family or friends that come for long visits, or visitors with young children whose clothing may get messy at your house.
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Tips & Tricks
Many stains are more likely to be removed entirely if soaked in cold water before it has had time to set.
If in doubt, test your color garment for colorfastness – apply warm water to an inconspicuous part (inside of the hem, for instance), then press this part with a warm iron between two pieces of white cloth.
To protect your favorite garments, try turning them inside out before washing.
Use a partitioned laundry basket to sort your laundry as you remove it.
Overloading your washing machine could mean that your clothes don’t properly get clean.
White streaks of powder left behind on your clothes due to undissolved detergent are usually caused by overloading your machine, and can be removed with an additional rinse cycle.
Washing much smaller loads on non-cotton cycles to give more freedom of movement in the drum and result in better cleaning.
Using too little detergent can cause whites to become dingy as there are insufficient ingredients to hold soils in the water so they don’t redeposit on the garments.
Overdosing in a soft-water area can lead to “oversudsing” which, in extreme cases, can mean suds come out of the machine.
Always check the fabric care label for the manufacturer’s washing recommendations.
Some dyes will bleed even in very cold water, so always sort your washing into light colors, dark colors, whites, and delicates.
To compensate for washing at lower temperatures, try using a Cotton (most agitation) or Synthetic cycle, if the garment care label allows. There are also detergents specially designed to work in cold water.
Whenever possible, dry your clothes outside on a line; you could see significant energy savings.
Make sure to close all zippers, fasteners, and hooks to prevent and reduce abrasion of fabric and consider placing delicate items into mesh laundry bags.
To pre-treat stains, apply undiluted laundry detergent directly onto stained areas. For best results, allow product to sit on stain for a few minutes, scrub product into stain, then wash.
When adding chlorine bleach, always use the bleach dispenser on your washer to ensure that it is added at the right time in the wash cycle. If your machine does not have a dispenser, add chlorine bleach at the end of the wash cycle.
Check garment care labels for recommended wash temperature.
For all HE washers, make sure to use a low-sudsing HE detergent.
Use the right amount of detergent. Follow package directions carefully. For heavily soiled and/or large loads, use more detergent.
If you do not have a detergent dispenser on your machine, add the detergent while the washer fills with water, ensure the detergent has dissolved, then add the clothes.
Keep your washing machine free of residues by running a monthly wash cycle with Tide Washing Machine Cleaner.