Wednesday 18 September 2013

Another great reason to buy vintage!


If I am going to sew a dress, I always pre-wash the fabric, just to make sure it's pre-shrunk.  When you buy a new (non-thrifted or non-vintage) dress (or shirt or jeans), it's not always the way, and things do often shrink in the wash.  Why?

They haven't been pre-shrunk of course!

Mechanical shrinking (also known as sanforizing ) is a process whereby the fabric is forced to shrink width and/or lengthwise, creating a fabric in which is basically preshrunk. Sanforizing was patented in the USA in 1930 by - wait for it - Sanford Lockwood Cluett.  Chuett eventually joined the family firm of detachable collar manufacturers, but he was also an inventor with around 200 patents in his name.

It appears that anti-shrink fabrics, both cottons and rayons, first arrived in Australia in 1939, judging from the ads I have found in various editions of the Australian Women's Weekly.  The ads also seem to disappear by the late 1950s.

vintage fabric fashion ad, 1939
1939



anti-shrink fabric ad from 1939
1939
anti-shrink fabric ad from 1940
1940

anti-shrink fabric ad from 1950
1950

1950

anti-shrink fabric ad from the 1950s
1952
I so want this dress!

anti-shrink fabric ad from 1955
1955

1956
anti-shrink fabric ad from 1957
1957
Basically the cloth is fed into the sanforizing machine which steams and presses it with a rotating cylinder, and the cloth is laterally expanded and then relaxation against a rubber sleeve that does the same thing - it gets shrunk.  The greater the pressure applied to the rubber sleeve, the less the shrinking afterwards.

So you have cloth which does not shrink significantly during clothes production or by washing the finished clothes. Cloth and articles made from it may be labelled to have a specific shrink-proof value (if pre-shrunk), of under 1%.  Obviously this process makes the fabric more expensive, so cheap fabrics used in cheap products, like those you buy at chain stores, will not usually be pre-shrunk.  Just another great reason to buy vintage!

You can read more about the process at the Sanforized website.

♥ Deb

By the way, if you love vintage ads, like me, check out my tumblr blog.

2 comments:

  1. I remember when I made the first linnen dress myself ages ago and I didn't pre-wash the fabric. In the first wash it shrunk so much that I ended up with an extremely tight body and sleeves that could accomodate a thin snake, but definitely not my hands! *^v^* Lesson learned! I love the fabric in the last but one ad!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We don't seem to be able to buy pre-shrunk fabric anymore - i wonder why?
      I am sure I have seen curtains in that yellow rose fabric!

      Delete

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