IH-634S-UHR - 21/23oz Raw Selvedge Denim Straight Cut Jeans - Indigo
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Well I will be you tomo night when mine arrive, the measurements are too big too me raw so I will potentially put them in the washing machine with no spin to get all the shrinkage out
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Well I will be you tomo night when mine arrive, the measurements are too big too me raw so I will potentially put them in the washing machine with no spin to get all the shrinkage out
You need to soak first, wash gently after. These are loom state so hopping over these steps may result in premature damage to material and stitching.
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Hey @neph93 it just occurred to me — when you say soak first, then wash, are you actually using detergent on said wash? Is that necessary if they're brand new? I'm curious if that would have any effect on the denim. Sorta seems like it wouldn't make a difference, but of course I could be totally wrong.
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Hey [mention]popvulture [/mention] - I do the same method you do for washing jeans. I’ve found that doing it myself in my tub gives me the results I’m looking for. What I believe the reason to be for soak them wash is that - the soak will saturate the cotton and then upon drying allow them to tighten up together for most of the constructional sewing. The wash afterwards is to get the machine to agitate the denim sufficiently to get all the shrink out.
What I think would be best for us, is two super hot tub soaks (use a thick plastic hanger / spatula / stiff non porous instrument to agitate in tub) and no need to add any detergent. The hot water, drying, and tub agitation should accomplish what a machine does with a little more elbow grease involved. I don’t think you’ve got anything to worry about using your method.
If anyone else has any other info, happy to be updated with better info. My tub journey starts tomorrow! [emoji369][emoji158]
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Makes sense! The reason I got to wondering about it is that I saw Neph's comment, then I happened to pick up the IH care pamphlet that came with my jeans (oddly I never read them, numbskull that I am). It said soak, followed my machine or hand wash… to which I was like "what's the difference between a soak and a wash?"
Could it be detergent? Or just same thing, different word? All I know is that I find it beyond comical that we geek out this much about this shit, but I do enjoy the hell out of it
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Do I need to get this translated intro some sort of other language? I can't believe it's not clear enough….
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Hi guys. Received mine and is ready to soak and wash. I’m gonna follow the attached IH instructions thoroughly with one hot soak, hang dry and then a gentle wash. But could anyone help me define Hot! What temperature in Celsius are we talking about approximately?
Thx in advance
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Hot so it just about hurts when you put your hand into the water.
Perfect. Thx Giles [emoji1690]
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Thanks @neph93 will do
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Work in progress.
Borrowed from my fish tank. This feels to me like Giles described it.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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What is considered a gentle spin cycle? My machines lowest rpm is 600, is this too much?
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Post soak.
Now drying before a maschine wash in the weekend [emoji1690]Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Well I mean, people spend almost 400 bucks on a pair of jeans — the directions make sense but it’s understandable there’s a worry about fucking them up. Especially when every other sentence in the thread is MAKE SURE YOU GET THE SHRINK OUTTTTT. Like I said, comical.
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I think we will rewrite the last sentence in the washing instructions, it's a tad misleading for RAW especially.
From: Do not tumble dry (this is likely to cause shrinkage and white marks).
to
Do not tumble dry, this is likely to cause marbling (white marks/lines where the fabric rubs the drum of the tumble dryer) -
Jeans arrived and I love them :-).
Struggling to button them up before a soak and been trying for 45 mins now hahaha. I will leave it for now and try again tomo.
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Jeans arrived and I love them :-).
Struggling to button them up before a soak and been trying for 45 mins now hahaha. I will leave it for now and try again tomo.
Wouldn’t worry too much…. Buttoning denim that gnarly is always hard. Use a pair of long nose pliers to stretch the buttonhole.
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Thanks @neph93, good shout I will go and find some. Using a teaspoon at the moment.
It’s all good, all part of raw thick denim!