10 mistakes to avoid when caring for knitwear and natural yarns
10 Mistakes to Avoid When Washing and Caring for Knitted Garments
The domestic treatment of knitted garments – especially when it comes to yarns to be treated – is a delicate phase.
Many problems such as felting, stiffness, loss of shape, or "disappointing results" are not due to the yarn, but to common mistakes made during home treatment.
Let's look at the most frequent ones.
1. Using water that is too hot
This is mistake number one.
Natural fibers (wool, cashmere, alpaca, etc.) do not tolerate high heat, especially when combined with agitation.
What happens:
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the fiber shrinks
-
the garment compacts excessively
-
there is a risk of irreversible felting
👉 Basic rule: lukewarm or cold water, always.
2. Changing temperature between washing and rinsing
Even if the water is not hot, temperature fluctuations are dangerous.
Typical mistake:
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washing in lukewarm water
-
rinsing in cold water (or vice versa)
Effect:
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fiber stress
-
stiffening
-
loss of elasticity
👉 The temperature must remain constant from start to finish.
3. Rubbing, twisting, or wringing the garment
Many treat knitwear as if it were cotton.
Serious mistake.
What NOT to do:
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rub the garment
-
twist it to remove water
-
wring it out forcefully
Result:
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deformations
-
localized felting
-
damaged knit stitch
👉 Water is removed by gentle pressing, never by twisting.
4. Using the wrong detergents
Another very common mistake is the use of:
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harsh detergents
-
universal products
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over-degreasing soaps
These products:
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dry out the fiber
-
remove elasticity
-
make the garment stiff over time
👉 You need a specific detergent for natural fibers, gentle and low-impact.
5. Felting "too much" thinking it makes it softer
Felting is a tool, not a shortcut.
Typical mistake:
"If I felt it more, it will become even softer"
In reality:
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too much felting compacts and closes the fiber
-
the garment loses definition
-
the product's lifespan decreases
👉 Felting should be light and controlled, not forced.
6. Drying the garment by hanging it
Hanging a wet garment is one of the most underestimated mistakes.
What happens:
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the weight of the water pulls the knitwear
-
the garment stretches
-
shoulders and edges deform
👉 Knitted garments should always be dried flat, on a horizontal surface.
7. Not observing resting times
After treatment, many want to "see the result immediately."
Mistake:
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handling the garment as soon as it's dry
-
folding or wearing it immediately
Natural fiber needs:
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time
-
rest
-
stabilization
👉 The final result is seen after a few hours (or a day).
8. Judging the yarn from the first treatment
Especially with:
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cashmere
-
recycled cashmere
-
carded yarns
The first treatment:
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opens the fiber
-
starts the process
-
is not always the definitive one
👉 Often, it's from the second treatment that the yarn truly expresses its potential.
9. Treating all yarns the same way
Each yarn is different in terms of:
-
count
-
twist
-
fiber
-
structure
Common mistake:
"I've always done it this way, and it's always worked"
👉 Each yarn must be understood and listened to, not standardized.
10. Thinking that a mistake is the yarn's fault
This is the most common mistake.
When a garment:
-
felts
-
hardens
-
loses shape
The first reaction is:
"The yarn is not good"
In most cases, however:
-
the yarn was correct
-
the treatment was not
Home treatment is not complicated, but it requires:
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attention
-
gentleness
-
awareness of the fiber
A yarn to be treated does not forgive mistakes, but when treated correctly, it delivers extraordinary results.