Thursday, 27 November 2014

How Often Should You Wash Your Towels?

How Often Should You Wash Your Towels?

With schools back in session, washing machines across the country are getting a workout cleaning those smelly gym and sports clothes. But do you know how often you should be washing your everyday clothes, sheets, and towels? Perhaps more often than you think. Here are some recommendations  for when it’s time to wash sheets, jeans, shirts, socks, underwear, and other items followed by some of the top laundry detergents from Consumer Reports’ tests. Of course, if you spill something on your best blouse wash it immediately.

We've all hung a towel on the hook behind our bathroom door, and wondered, "Can I get away without washing this for one more day?
"It's a matter of personal preference, but washing them after every use is a bit excessive," she says. "If you hang them on a towel bar and allow them to dry well after each use, bath towels can easily be used three times or even more before you toss them in the laundry. Washing and drying towels too often will make them wear out faster, and it's just a waste of time and energy."

It's actually your bathroom's hand towels that might need to be laundered more often. "Hand towels get dirtier faster since you use them more than once per day," Forte says. "They should be changed every couple days, or even every day, if you have a large family."

Notice that your towels are smelling a bit funky? Launder them in the hottest water that's safe for the fabric, and add in one or two cups of white vinegar (a powerhouse item in your cleaning arsensal). Then wash them again with your regular deteregent. And remember: Keep towels away from fabric softener. Both the liquid kind and dryer sheets can inhibit the fabric's absorbtion abilities.

If you're drying silverware with a kitchen towel, for instance, chances are you're drying it with germs. A 2014 study  found that 89 percent of kitchen rags carried coliform bacteria, the stuff found in both animal and human digestive tracts that's used to measure water contamination (though to be fair, not all of it is dangerous).

We took a deep dive into the particulars of towel cleaning:
how often should you wash the various kinds of towels used on a daily basis? It turns out you should wash all your towels more often than you probably think. For bath towels, the experts we spoke with recommend washing after about three uses to remove millions (yes, tens of millions) of dead skin cells and avoid that musty scent. Kitchen rags should ideally be dipped in diluted bleach between uses (who knew?), according to a University of Arizona germ expert. And face towels should really be replaced after every use if you don't want to reintroduce bacteria to your pores, says a dermatologist.

Here's an expert-vetted guide to keeping your towels fresh, fluffy and filth-free.

KITCHEN TOWELS:
As mentioned, these are hands-down the most worrisome towels in your home. "You may think you are cleaning the counter where food will be placed," says Kelly Reynolds, a researcher at the College of Public Health. "But if you are using a dirty kitchen rag, you may actually be introducing hundreds of thousands of bacteria."

The answer? Ideally you should launder your kitchen towels after each use. A next-best option, though is to dip your towels in a diluted bleach solution between uses, and let them dry. Reynolds recommends filling your sink with water and a bit of bleach  two teaspoons per gallon of sink water will do the trick and prolong the time you're able to use your towels between washes. At least weekly, launder them in your washing machine (on an antibacterial or sanitizing cycle, if possible).

BATH TOWELS :
That musty smell isn't your imagination  because bath towels are extra-thick, they lock in moisture and harbor odors more quickly.

The answer? When you wash them, use vinegar in place of fabric softener. "Fabric softener residue traps odors," she explains. "The vinegar strips it away." (As a general rule, skipping the softener also keeps most towels absorbent).

running your bath towels through the washing machine as normal, but with no soap and just one cup of vinegar. Then, wash again with regular detergent.  give them a "second rinse," if your washer has that option. Dry immediately to prevent mustiness.

You may be accustomed to using your bath towels for weeks between washes (not that we, ahem, do that), but the experts we spoke with advise washing them after about every three uses. If you're sick, it's important to disinfect towels with chlorine bleach (if they're white) or disinfectants like Lysol that contain phenolics (if the towels aren't white), says Leverette.

FACE TOWELS AND WASHCLOTHS:

"Dirt and bacteria have a way of getting caught in the fabric on a washcloth," says Dermatology. "When you wash or dry your face with a dirty washcloth, you're reintroducing that dirt and bacteria back into the skin."

The answer? The experts we talked with were strict on this one: Face towels and wash clothes should be washed after every use. And while that's the ideal frequency with which you want to wash your face and body cloths, it's really about how much you use it. If you're only using a towel to pat your face dry, it's okay to use it a few times between washes. But if you're removing makeup, a real-deal laundering is necessary. He recommends a regular, hot-water wash cycle, using fragrance-free detergent to avoid irritating your skin.

So does this mean you need to trash all of those towels you've had since your first apartment and start from scratch? Not exactly. The experts we spoke with say you can actually keep your same towels for basically ever.  points out that a good-quality towel will last anywhere from five to 10 years  and as long as it's clean, it can do its job until the day it becomes threadbare.

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