Blue and Cream Marl - Wrist Warmers

Blue and Cream Marl - Wrist Warmers

Regular price £39.00
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Scottish flag Made in Scotland
Scottish goat drawing 100% Cashmere

a little more detail...

  • 100% Cashmere 
  • Made Scotland
  • Blue and Cream Mix Colour
  • Plain Knit, 6 ply (3x2/28's)
  • One Size Ladies
  • Great for Using at a Computer or Mobile
  • Wash in Cold water, Do Not Tumble Dry

Many manufacturers recommend that you dry clean your cashmere jumper because very few people know how to wash them and they get sick of customers complaining that their lovely expensive jumpers have shrunk or been ruined.

Cashmere HATES hot water and too many soap suds.

You can clean your cashmere knitwear in COLD water (not warm) COLD. You can add a LITTLE detergent.  If you have a grubby spot on the item, just rub that with soap and rinse out and then wash the whole item.

Rinse thoroughly - with COLD water - and I mean COLD. When rinsed - lie it flat on top of a towel in a well aired room. Once dry you can iron.

It's so easy, this is how you should wash all natural fibres.  Natural fibres like cashmere, lambswool, merino etc are pretty easy to take care of, its often the fibre of the stitching that will shrink or change the shape of lets say a wool suit, so don't try washing that in cold water. IF IN ANY DOUBT - DRY CLEAN !

Let's talk about  'ply'.

PLY is the number of threads twined together to make a single piece of cashmere yarn.

You will commonly see references to 2-ply, 3-ply, 4-ply and 8-ply.  Modern day references to Ply is different from 20 years ago.  Let us explain.

2-ply 20 years ago = 4-ply today (2 x 2 threads twined together) Lighter Weight, normally gloves and summer sweaters, socks etc

3-ply, 20 years ago = 6-ply today (3 x 2 threads twined together) Middle Weight, normally gloves and slightly heavier weight garments

4-ply, 20 years ago = 8-ply today (4 x 2 threads twined together). Heavier Weight, normally mens classic jumpers, hats, scarves etc

Of course there are other factors to the weight of the cashmere like the gauge etc that is it knitted on, but this is a rough indication of what ply means.

 

Moths love cashmere, moths love all our favourite clothes that are made from natural fibres and in order of eating, they will start expensive.

They are a total nightmare and unfortunately I don't know of any legal substance that will eliminate them, however I am obsessed about keeping them away - far away from my home and shop.  

Here are some suggestions that help me. 

I store all cashmere jumpers in the summer in Really Useful Boxes, each jumper is clean and in a bag.  Someone suggested recently that if you put them in airtight vacuumed bags and then store in the boxes that would work.

I frequently use Moth Bombs which I buy on line about once every two months.  They are a bit of a pain as you have to turn off alarms before activating them, otherwise the smoke will set off all your alarms.

I clean my closet twice a year, taking all the clothes out and shaking them, dusting the whole area and then I spray all the corners of the room with moth spray.

I alway have hanging the sticky moth traps in the closet.  They say they are not that effective, but I see the moths stuck on them, surely it helps - a few less moths in the world?

I have also in the past put my jumpers at home in bags and then frozen them for a few days - I'm not convinced it's worth all that effort!

One thing for sure - if you really have a moth infestation and your closet area is carpeted, rip it out, underlay and all.  Get Rent to Kill in and tell them you have cockroaches and get them to spray the floor area.  Whatever kills a cockroach - is bound to kill moths!

Good luck and don't worry about the odd hole or two in your old cashmere jumper.  A good quality jumper should last for years, and the odd hole or fray tells me a story that it's been loved and enjoyed (not only by moths) it tells me it's a quality jumper that's been cherished and worn.

If anyone out there has some ideas on how to deal with this - please share with me.  I am always open to suggestions.  I am no expert on this subject, but I am diligent on trying to keep them away, and so far so good.