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Wear it again, Sam: Delaying laundry day

Posted Oct 03 2007, 02:00 PM by Donna Freedman
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I've got a dirty little secret: sometimes I wear a shirt twice before washing it.

Before you hold your nose and run screaming from the room, hear me out. I'm not talking about a shirt in which I've done a day's worth of hard manual labor in the hot sun. It's usually a shirt I've worn for half a day or less.

The other day, for example, I didn't dress to leave the house until close to lunchtime. Before that I was the stereotypical freelance writer sitting around in sweatpants and a T-shirt my daughter bought to celebrate entering the eighth grade. (My daughter is now 29. Freelancers really don't care what they look like.)

At 11:30 a.m. I put on a green silk shirt ($3.99, Value Village) and slacks and left for the university. My classes ended at 3:20 p.m. I was home by 3:45 p.m. The shirt went back on a hanger.

This is an argument for a return to the "school clothes" and "play clothes" of my youth. When my sisters and I got home from school, we changed from the then-obligatory dresses into grubs that allowed us to climb trees, ride bikes, and generally rip and roar. And yes, a dress sometimes got worn again if it wasn't obviously dirty or too wrinkled.

Reduce, reuse, rewear

These day I gladly reshelve shirts whenever I can. It saves money, i.e. the cost of soap and water. Less laundering extends the life of a garment. Best of all, it saves me the time of washing and ironing the item. (No, I don't iron everything. But some of my shirts do need a touch of heat.) 

 As with any other time- or money-saving tip, I use common sense to apply the half-day rule. If it's high summer and I've been sweating at an unshaded bus stop, or if I've spilled something on the shirt (I'm a woman who wears her lunch with pride), then naturally I'll wash before rewearing.

And my "play" clothes? Those old things are used off and on for four or five days until I'm disgusted enough with myself to wash them. Look, I don't have a roommate. No one's going to notice that my caulk-stained "Anchorage Daily News Health & Safety Committee" T-shirt has been worn three evenings in a row.

How dirty could it be?

I babysit for families whose young children put everything, even jeans, into the clothes hamper at night.  These are not mud-caked pants or food-stained tops, yet they get washed every time they're worn. How dirty could this stuff have gotten, especially since some of these kids rarely go outside?

So consider relaxing your standards. If anyone notices, frame it as "a green thing": You're saving a load or two of wash (water, sewer, energy) a month, and reducing the wear and tear on your clothes means you'll replace them less often, thereby consuming fewer resources. As noted, I'm still using a T-shirt my daughter discarded years ago. It's almost ready for the rag bag, but there's a dance in the old dame yet.

The comedian Jeff Foxworthy jokes that men's approach to laundry is, "Does this stink too bad to wear one more time?" This is not what I'm advocating here. If something is malodorous or obviously dirty, then for heaven's sake wash it.

But if you've only worn it to a special event, or just for a few hours at church or school? Use your judgment and maybe get one more wear out of it. That is, if it doesn't stink too bad.

Comments

 

At work-each week I only wear 1 pair of pants and I tend to alternate each week.  I get kinda dirty, but they don't stink, it is an arcade/movie theatre though and what is the use of washing pants everynight when in the next 4 days of wearing-they will get dirty again? Outside of work, I usualy wear the same jeans for 2-3 days, alternate, wear another pair for a few days, clean the first pair, wear, clean 2nd, alternate, etc. It saves time, money, etc. The only thing I need to wash with more frequency are my shirts as they get stinky, u.w., bras, and socks. I think also---I bathe everyday so it doesn't matter so much.  If someone doesn't, though, it is not so god.

I'm a young professional and proud rewear-er, especially clothes that don't generally leave the house. I wear my pajamas anywhere from 2 nights to a week (how dirty could they get while I'm just laying there?). Sweaters (just worn to work in an office) are lucky if they get washed once a month and skirts and dresses just need a little ironing (if that) before they are ready to be reworn. I seldom have anything dry cleaned!

I too have been re-wearing for years.  Hanging items in the bathroom during showers helps greatly, but the best thing is to hang clothes on a real old-fashioned clothesline. Just a few hours on a breezy day (warm or cold) will freshen up clothing more than enough to re-wear. I love my clothesline so much that I don't even own a dryer. Even in the mountains in PA there are plenty of days breezy enough to freshen items and even dry freshly washed clothes. When it rains or snows the wet clothes go on a collapsible drying rack near the furnace. I don't know how much I save by not buying and running a dryer, but I'm sure it's worth it, plus my clothes always smell like the fresh outdoors.  

My habit of re-wearing began as a college student who had to lug laundry down three-flights of stairs to wash.  Unless the items were soiled I would re-wear them.  I now work in an office and most of the time my clothes do not get dirty, so I will re-wear a blouse and slacks a couple of times.  I have found this saves on electricity and water bills, plus it helps the environment by not using as much water.

I do this too because I hate washing clothes. I live in an apartment and I am on the third floor. The laundrymat is 2 blocks away. 3 if I include the street I love on. But I do a bad thing. I buy clothes rather than wash the ones I have. Now I am having a closet emergency. Everything will not fit in my drawers, closet and underbed storage. I guess I will have to make a charity donation soon!

i'm a re-wearer too!  i hate doing laundry (ok call me lazy i don't care!)!  i'm trying to teach my kids that if you only wore it to go to dinner that it's not dirty unless you spilled on it.  I don't like to wash my jeans too much b/c they do get worn out & they are too expensive to have that happen.  I wash all colors together but i do have a new washer that uses the HE detergent & I also use clorox 2 so the colors don't run.  

My dad always said that clothes still had "clean wear" left in them, and would always hang up shirts, or jeans or whatever in a certain section of the closet reserved for clothes that still had "clean wear".  Then if you were working outside, or working at home, you could select those items and get several uses out of each one, until all the "clean wear" had run out.  My husband and I still abide by that theory, but our teen children have bad habits of leaving clothes, clean and dirty in one huge mess, so all have to get washed over and over and over.  I make them do their own laundry and they each do 5 times the loads we do.

Am glad to meet you common sense people. Is great to know I am one of you.

anything that helps  the environment makes sense to me. We are brainwashed by advertising to be super clean freaks, if we wash clothes after one wearing,  we use more of their products.....I always hang all my clothes on hangers to dry and only use the dryer for sheets and towels.

I think a lot of kids throw stuff in the hamper after one brief wearing - even after just trying something on - because they are too lazy to hang it up or fold it!  In some families, if you throw it in the hamper, mommy will wash it and put it away for you!  To those parents: kids over 10 can actually do their own laundry!  Personally I think only underpants and any clothes with noticeable soil or odor need to be washed after one wearing.  I also re-use towels that have been used to dry off after shower or bath (but family members each have their own towel), but don't reuse washcloths used to clean the body.  I really like Alexandra's tip about bras.  I've been washing them in a lingerie bag in the washer, but her method sounds much gentler!

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