Bird's Eye - Types of Cotton Fabrics
Bird's Eye - Types of Cotton Fabrics
| What is birdseye?
Birdseye is a cotton fabric made on a dobby loom, which results in a small, repetitive woven pattern that resembles diamonds, or more commonly thought, the eye of a bird. This fabric was originally made with cotton or linen and is versatile enough for a variety of different garments, though it is typically used in men’s suits.
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| How to wear birdseye:
Birdseye is an eye-catching fabric with a characteristic pattern that lends itself to statement-making clothing. Birdseye is a particular favorite for formal suiting, especially in summer, because birdseye fabric tends to be lightweight and breathable, especially if it’s made with cotton. If you’re in the market for a bespoke tailored suit, ask about birdseye.
| Maintaining birdseye:
A birdseye cotton suit can be properly maintained with a suit brush and a steamer to loosen any wrinkles that may have formed during wear and storage. Hang your suit with a hanger that won’t distort its shape to ensure your suit’s longevity.
Does birdseye wrinkle?
Birdseye is a sturdy fabric that is naturally resistant to wrinkling.
Is birdseye easy to clean?
A birdseye suit can be spot cleaned as necessary. To preserve the integrity of the suit, only dry clean once a year.
| Maintaining bird's eye
A bird’s eye cotton suit can be properly maintained with a suit brush and a steamer to loosen any wrinkles that may have formed during wear and storage. Hang your suit with a hanger that won’t distort its shape to ensure your suit’s longevity.
Does bird's eye wrinkle?
Bird’s eye is a sturdy fabric that is naturally resistant to wrinkling.
Is bird's eye easy to clean?
A bird’s eye suit can be spot cleaned as necessary. To preserve the integrity of the suit, only dry clean once a year.
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I'm Wirecutter's Laundry Expert, and My Favorite Cleaning Cloth Is a ...
Before microfiber cloths became ubiquitous cleaning tools, humble household rags reigned supreme. Rags could be anything: old cotton undershirts, accidentally bleached towels, or a holey (and embarrassing) pair of tighty-whities.
When I was growing up, my family’s favored rags were plump, cotton cloths, which we used for everything from dusting furniture to polishing brass. These cloths also happened to be diapers — reusable cloth diapers, to be specific.
When I asked my neat-freak father, Richard Thomas, why cloth diapers have been his rag of choice for 45 years, he answered enthusiastically: “They’re absorbent, they don’t leave lint — they really cannot be beat!”
Cloth diapers — Gerber Birdseye 3-Ply Prefold Cloth Diapers in particular — have also become my default household rags for the same reasons my father uses them: They clean up spills, they dust well, and the cotton weave leaves no fuzz.
These soft, absorbent cloth diapers handle spills, dust, and other schmutz with ease, and they don’t leave lint behind.
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Contact us to discuss your requirements of birdseye cloth. Our experienced sales team can help you identify the options that best suit your needs.
Gerber Birdseye 3-Ply Prefold Cloth Diapers consist of three layers of 100% cotton. The interlacing birdseye weave makes the fabric especially absorbent, explained Karen Leonas, a professor of textile sciences at Wilson College of Textiles at North Carolina State University. Cotton is also biodegradable, a detail I appreciate when I’m cleaning with cloth diapers.
I’ve found that these diapers are great for mopping up spills. This might sound pretty obvious, but they really do soak up large amounts of liquid.
I’ve used cloth diapers to clean up many different kinds of vibrant spills, like coffee, tea, and red wine. One downside is that cloth diapers tend to hang onto these types of stains if they aren’t laundered quickly.
I recommend washing cloth diapers in cold water, with Wirecutter’s top-pick powder laundry detergent; the added kick of oxygen bleach helps manage odors and stains. You can use warm water for an extra stain-removing boost, but I’ve had good results using cold water.
When it comes to dusting, the birdseye weave creates a durable cloth that produces very little lint. And for dusting, cloth diapers wipe away debris as well as single-use dust pads do. But if you’re like me, and you’d prefer not to throw away something every time you dust, cloth diapers are a great alternative.
A cloth diaper won’t leave behind the streaks of fuzz you often get when you wipe down a mirror with a paper towel. So you can achieve a speckless shine.
A cloth diaper is also great for spot-cleaning carpets, upholstery, and clothing. The first line of defense for treating fresh liquid stains is to soak up as much of the fluid as you can. Despite being small enough for a baby’s rear end, Gerber’s cloth diapers easily absorb a surprising volume of fluids before needing to be wrung out. In our testing, each diaper easily held about 4 ounces of liquid.
Cloth diapers also come in handy in the laundry room. As Wirecutter’s resident laundry expert, I’ve found time and again that for fresh clothing stains, it’s typically best to blot up the excess liquid before you pretreat and wash the item.
And cloth diapers can quickly soak up pretty much any moisture or fluid from fabrics. They are ideal when you’re handling fine or delicate materials that are not colorfast. Quickly absorbing moisture from these garments can prevent excess dye from bleeding. Cloth diapers will also do this without leaving lint on your favorite delicate vintage item.
Cloth diapers are great for polishing fine metals that are easily scratched, such as silver, brass, and gold. The soft material is gentle on surfaces, and it handles metal polish well, so the tarnish can be effortlessly wiped away. (Be warned that for a particularly grimy item, you may need to use more than one cloth diaper.)
Cleaning with reusable cloth diapers might sound odd, but even Gerber suggests holding onto them for tasks other than diapering, including cleaning, dusting, and washing your car. Wirecutter editor Signe Brewster first started using cloth diapers as burp cloths for her children, and now they’ve become her go-to cleaning rags.
One downside is that cloth diapers need to be laundered fairly often. And, as with any rag, reusing cloth diapers without washing them could potentially allow nasty microbes to flourish — or, worse, you could accidentally spread them from surface to surface in your home. According to Sean Cormier, chair of textiles development and marketing at Fashion Institute of Technology, cotton fibers take longer to dry than the synthetic materials typically used in other cleaning cloths. This extra moisture creates an environment that can allow bacteria to flourish, especially if a cloth diaper is crumpled into a ball and thrown in a hamper.
So be mindful of what you use the diapers for. I’d suggest reaching for something else to clean smelly food spills, bodily fluids, or other pungent substances that are prone to bacterial growth. (If you won’t be washing your cloth diapers for a while, you can prevent odor and stretch the time between laundering by rinsing them in hot water with a little bit of dish soap, and then hang them to air-dry.)
Otherwise, clean away. My dad was right. These diapers really can’t be beat.
This article was edited by Ingrid Skjong and Megan Beauchamp.
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