Alex is looking for some advice: "Hoping that someone can help. I have the sailcloth tab top curtains from Pottery Barn and as the final part of redoing my bedroom this month want to give them a good clean. They are 100% percent cotton but the label says they are dry clean only. I think washing them in cold on the delicate cycle should do the trick and hanging to dry.
Are there any AT'ers that have experience with these? I'd hate to end up with curtains half their original size!"




Just dry clean them.
view patrick (the other one)'s profile
I have the exact same curtains. I had mine dry cleaned and they still shrank but they were able to re-stretch them to close to their original size. I wouldn't recommend washing them at all.
view dmstudio's profile
why on earth would you buy cotton curtains that are dry clean only and why on earth would you not be able to wash them?
front-loading machine, cold, delicate cycle and they should be fine.
view any such name's profile
I have the exact same curtains and have washed them in cold water and hung them to dry. They did shrink some, about an inch in all directions, but other than that they washed up nicely.
You may want to consider getting them pressed at the dry cleaners -- pressing them with an iron was time consuming and they don't hang quite as nicely as they did previously. I think a professional pressing would help.
view NYSFGirl's profile
i - also - have the exact same curtains and - also - have washed them in cold water multiple times.
What I found works well, is to hang them back on the curtain rod while they are wet - and give them a gentle tug to stretch them down and pull out any crimps. They dry in place and look absolutely fine.
...but a wee bit rumpled does goes with my decor...
view dianew's profile
Dry clean cotton? I don't think so. I'd use the above washing suggestions add a method that keeps cotton pants from shrinking. Hang them, then use a couple of clip pants hangers to suspend something heavy from the bottom. The weight stretches the cotton and keeps it from shrinking.
view farmhousemoderne's profile
I washed cotton curtains and the problem isn't shrinkage, it's maintaining how the fabric hangs. If you wash in the machine you'll get lots of small wrinkles, and even if you iron it,the curtains probably won't hang the way they used to.
view josie's profile
Cotton ALWAYS shrinks - even at the dry cleaners. But cotton also can stretch back - just like a cotton sweater - you know how they look after wearing them a few times.
Here is what I would do - and I wash everything (except coats) all my cashmere sweaters are hand washed and the curtains I wash as well.
I would put these cotton curtains in the cold delicate cycle with some delicate detergent - such as woolite or anything better.
Take them out of the washing mashine - DO NOT PUT IN DRYER. Let them air dry a bit in your room, but not completely dry. they need to be 20% wet - what I call soft. Then you need to iron them with no steam iron on the cotton setting. Make sure to iron on the back of the curtain - never iron something on the face side.
I promise you anything that you'll have the most crisp curtains ever and they won't shrink that much. Dry Cleaning is full of chemicals and you will inhale those chemicals one way or another.
view Anusha73's profile
Ditto what NYSFGirl said. I had the same Pottery Barn curtains and they WILL shrink even if you wash them on the cold gentle cycle. For me that was OK, they were slightly too long before. But they didn't hang quite right after.
Get them dry cleaned, even though it costs an arm and a leg.
view LaceyM's profile
I'm one of those people who obsessively washes everything with no respect for label suggestion. The reasons for such an outrageous behavior - a. I think everything comes out much cleaner and fresher from washing. b. less expensive (providing that you do not have to replace curtains altogether), c. environmentally friendly. d. i do not bark at my dog or hiss at my cats for sitting on the furniture or rubbing against it, harmonious cohabitation a big in my view.
To avoid shrinking - wash in cold water, dry on "no heat" or "fluff" setting till most of the moisture gone. Hang dry while still dump. You can spray "no wrinkle" starch on.
view Astrid Vladi's profile
I have them, red ones. I washed them- I have to -I have a bad, bad dog. I washed them in cold with woolite, then I hung them up to dry. I didn't notice any real shrinkage, and I didn't really need to iron them either- just a touch up. But the color changed a bit. Not enough that I had to take them down, but you might take that into consideration if you have darker cotton curtains.
view lorijo's profile
oh- I also have white cotton tab top curtains- cheap ones- in my living room too- they are 7 years old now- I wash them with the same method twice a year and they shrank a bit, but are just fine, clean with no odd dry cleaning smell!
view lorijo's profile
I have almost the exact window set up as you, and the Ikea roman shades - but my windows don't open, so not as much of a dust problem - here's a link to the photo.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/24354747@N00/2320950769/
view sillahee's profile
A trick I've learned from having had custom curtains made over the past few years - dry clean the curtains the first two times you want them cleaned. After that it should be totally safe for home washing (without tumble drying).
Tip provided by a lot of the cloth suppliers and curtain making shops I've dealt with :)
view onephatcow's profile
Pottery Barn should be using prewashed fabric for their cotton curtains.
view gryt's profile
Can you afford to replace the curtains in case they are ruined by washing them? Get them dry cleaned.
view Fontessa's profile
Usually you only have to dry clean cotton if it has an applied finish, curtains most often don't have a finish. I have mine dry cleaned because they can press them better than me and then I don't spend hours obsessively ironing.
view erinorea's profile
Let down the hems before you wash them, Janel. Makers often say dryclean only, but that is only to be fool proof. You may find that you have a grey tide mark where you have let the hem down but washing will make it much less noticeable. They should come up beautifully if you put a cup of white vinegar in the fabric softener dispenser which will remove any residue of washing powder.
view Battling Betty's profile