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For Longer-Lasting Clothes, Science Says Use This Wash Cycle
Popular Mechanics ^ | August 15, 2025 | Caroline Delbert

Posted on 08/21/2025 12:51:56 PM PDT by Red Badger

This time and temperature keeps fabrics strong and prevents premature aging.

Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story:

* Procter & Gamble funded a study of wash cycle length that found colder and shorter is better for clothes.

* Fabric dye density and lifespan is separate from issues like germs and bacteria in the wash.

* Cold, short washes reduced shed microfibers and transferred dyes.

=========================================================================

Scientists from the University of Leeds—and, it should be mentioned, Procter & Gamble—say the best way to keep clothes looking fresh for as long as possible is to use the coldest, shortest wash cycle.

The detergent manufacturer joined with lead author and design school instructor Lucy Cotton (yes) on a study of the way machine washing causes fabrics to spray microfibers. These lost fibers can cause premature garment aging and weaken fabrics.

In the published paper, researchers used dozens of t-shirts from a specific U.K. activewear seller representing a handful of brands like Gildan, Russell, and Hanes. Scientists ran washing machines empty at first to ensure no ridealong microfibers were inside, then collected water from the entire cycle to make sure all newly released microfibers were captured.

The resulting wash water was evaporated, dried completely, and then weighed. The scientists measured dye hold and transfer using swatches of “receiver” fabric in each load, with their color gauged before and after the wash.

After a battery of tests with different colors and materials of t-shirts at different wash temperatures and cycle lengths, the results were clear. From the study:

“[T]here is significantly greater colour loss observed for the 40 °C Cotton Short (85 min) cycle in comparison with the Cold Express (30 min) cycle. These observations provide evidence that in a ‘real’ situation increases in washing time and washing temperature increase colour loss over repeated laundering.” The scientists also measured how much dye changed from darker colors to lighter ones, which is what leads to greying t-shirts and dimming of colors on bright prints, for example.

“Considering the effect of colour transfer over repeated laundering, it was observed that for most white receiver fabrics, significantly greater colour transfer to the tracer fabrics was observed for the 40 °C Cotton Short (85 min) cycle in comparison with the Cold Express (30 min) cycle. These observations provide evidence that, in a ‘real’ situation, increases in washing time and washing temperature increase dye transfer.”

When it came to microfibers, the same relationship bore out: higher temperature and longer time meant more microfibers, whether the fabric of the t-shirt was cotton or a polyester blend. And the release of these fibers never let up.

“What is also evidenced is that on the eighth and [16th] wash that significant numbers of microfibres are still being released from the fabrics, suggesting that there is a consistent mechanism of microfibre generation and release throughout the life of the fabrics,” the researchers wrote.

These researchers conclude that the best wash cycle is a modified Leviathan: gentler, colder, and shorter. By reducing time and temperature, they say, we can reduce the amount of microfiber pollution released into the general water cycle, the amount of waste soap, and the carbon footprint of our washer activity.

Teaming with Procter & Gamble, which released its first cold-water detergent to much ballyhoo in 2005, is a canny financial move. P&G funded the research and added its two cents about its advanced detergents in the press release. But the research appears in Dyes & Pigments, a peer-reviewed journal, and constituted Cotton’s Ph.D. project—regardless of the corporate cold water.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Education; Health/Medicine; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: clothes; wash
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To: SaxxonWoods

Got to be a place of equilibrium of minimal damage to the clothes and maximum clean clothes.


21 posted on 08/21/2025 1:15:39 PM PDT by Jim W N (MAGA by restoring the Gospel of the Grace of Christ (Jude 3) and our Free Constitutional Republic!)
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To: Red Badger

My thought is what reason would the cabal have to make us think it’s better to wash clothes in cold water. I have an idea or two.

The truth is probably the opposite.


22 posted on 08/21/2025 1:17:10 PM PDT by reasonisfaith
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To: Red Badger
Fabric dye density and lifespan is separate from issues like germs and bacteria in the wash.

And the more heat the better for germs and bacteria - and soiling.

SOAK because agitation wears fabric. Cold is fine for a quick freshening, but warm to hot cleans better.

23 posted on 08/21/2025 1:20:07 PM PDT by gloryblaze
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To: reasonisfaith

Maybe it’s because warmer water is better for getting out the carcinogens and other toxins put into fabric by China.


24 posted on 08/21/2025 1:21:40 PM PDT by reasonisfaith
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To: Red Badger

Except in the winter, our well water is about 50.

I use the warm cycle.


25 posted on 08/21/2025 1:22:03 PM PDT by metmom (He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon." Amen. Come, Lord Jesus….)
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To: Red Badger

Longer lasting cloths? No thanks.

I’m still wearing jeans and T-shirts that I bought in the 1990s. I wish they’d wear out so I would have to go shopping.;-)


26 posted on 08/21/2025 1:23:29 PM PDT by RoosterRedux ("There's nothing so inert as a closed mind" )
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To: Red Badger

Remember this 2016 ad

From AI:

A commercial for Qiaobi laundry detergent showed a Chinese woman putting laundry into a machine, then a Black man with paint splatters appearing. She stuffs the detergent into his mouth, shoves him into the washing machine, and then a clean, fair-skinned Asian man emerges.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GDcBFCo8gKU


27 posted on 08/21/2025 1:23:47 PM PDT by DFG
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To: Red Badger

My wife swears most wear comes from drying. She dries on low and hangs to finish.

Of course, we live in a desert where a wet pair of blue jeans will dry in 30 minutes.


28 posted on 08/21/2025 1:25:08 PM PDT by MeanWestTexan (Sometimes There Is No Lesser Of Two Evils)
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To: philman_36; Red Badger; BobL; Kaslin; BenLurkin
The rule of thumb I was taught over 50 years ago was colors in cold and whites in hot.

Fine. THIS “study” examined T-shirts. And, more importantly, “fiber-loss from the T-Shirts while washing many times in either hot or cold water.

Great. Washing cotton clothes in hotter water continually caused fiber loss over time. (Fibre-loss actually - this was a British study after all.)

What about “dirt loss”? Is not “removing dirt” more important than “minimizing loss of cotton micro-fibres” ? Yes. My hot-washed cotton handkerchiefs and socks do lose mass over time. And, after 4 - 5 years, they are regularly replaced.

29 posted on 08/21/2025 1:25:55 PM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (Method, motive, and opportunity: No morals, shear madness and hatred by those who cheat.)
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To: MeanWestTexan

When I was a kid, we washed clothes in HOT BOILING WATER from a cast iron pot in the middle of the back yard. The water came from rain barrels, drums actually, under the eaves of the house. Then hand wrong (the wringer was broken) and put on a clothesline. Laundry was an all day affair.............


30 posted on 08/21/2025 1:29:55 PM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

In old days England used to have a cohort of good scientists.
Now, it’s clear what English scientists are doing...


31 posted on 08/21/2025 1:34:11 PM PDT by leopud
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To: Red Badger

OK so your cloths will last longer, but sport ground-in dirt and bacteria - a greenies delight.


32 posted on 08/21/2025 1:35:22 PM PDT by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
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To: reasonisfaith

Clothes are one thing. Towels, bedsheets, undergarments go in hot water for a longer cycle. Probably the reason why the bedbugs that 3rd world countries reintroduced to the USA since Obama’s regime are hard to get rid of.


33 posted on 08/21/2025 1:37:13 PM PDT by AbolishCSEU (Amount of "child" support paid is inversely proportionate to mother's actual parenting of children)
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To: PIF

Yep.


34 posted on 08/21/2025 1:37:43 PM PDT by AbolishCSEU (Amount of "child" support paid is inversely proportionate to mother's actual parenting of children)
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To: Robert A Cook PE
These observations provide evidence that, in a ‘real’ situation, increases in washing time and washing temperature increase dye transfer.”

Like I said, what I was taught still seems to hold true. Colored clothes in cold water.
I'll keep washing my whites in hot, along with bleach for keeping them white.

35 posted on 08/21/2025 1:37:45 PM PDT by philman_36 (Pride breakfasted with plenty, dined with poverty and supped with infamy. Benjamin Franklin)
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To: reasonisfaith

My thought is what reason would the cabal have to make us think it’s better to wash clothes in cold water. I have an idea or two.

The truth is probably the opposite.

To curtail our use of energy, mainly gas, until they can nationalize electricity usage?


36 posted on 08/21/2025 1:39:07 PM PDT by TiGuy22
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To: Vermont Lt

Try being married to someone in the trades...


37 posted on 08/21/2025 1:39:22 PM PDT by AbolishCSEU (Amount of "child" support paid is inversely proportionate to mother's actual parenting of children)
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To: Red Badger

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wnz6G0PN6vA


38 posted on 08/21/2025 1:41:10 PM PDT by AbolishCSEU (Amount of "child" support paid is inversely proportionate to mother's actual parenting of children)
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To: Red Badger

It seems obvious that cold, short cycles will reduce wear and tear on clothes. It also seems obvious that it will result in less effective cleaning of those clothes.


39 posted on 08/21/2025 1:41:24 PM PDT by EnderWiggin1970
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To: Red Badger


"found colder and shorter is better for clothes"


Well, DUH... we've known that since.. forever?!>.
40 posted on 08/21/2025 1:55:24 PM PDT by Bikkuri (I am proud to be a PureBlood.)
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