IHxB01xRAW Beatle Buster 18oz Raw Japanese Selvage Denim Indigo
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So long as it's not boiling hot, no the patch should be fine. There's a video on the 634SR thread that shows an extra crispy patch ;).
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Does not matter if you give it a load of agitation.
Yarns and/or fabrics are not fixed materials. They consist of separate fibres that will stretch when exposed to tension, i.e. they elongate during the process of being made into cloth (during spinning, weaving, bleaching, dyeing and the various finishing processes, yarns and cloth are under continuous tension). Some or all of this stretch within the fabric is retained in the post-loom fabric because of friction between the fibres and the yarns.
The stretch that occurs can be eliminated when the friction within the fabric is reduced. This will happen during soaking and/or washing, where both water and soap act as lubricants. The lubricants, along with the mechanical action of the washer, help the fibres relax and contract (shrink) back to their original length.
One of the reasons that dry cleaning does not shrink natural fabrics is that the friction within the fabric is not reduced by dampening.
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Does not matter if you give it a load of agitation.
Yarns and/or fabrics are not fixed materials. They consist of separate fibres that will stretch when exposed to tension, i.e. they elongate during the process of being made into cloth (during spinning, weaving, bleaching, dyeing and the various finishing processes, yarns and cloth are under continuous tension). Some or all of this stretch within the fabric is retained in the post-loom fabric because of friction between the fibres and the yarns.
The stretch that occurs can be eliminated when the friction within the fabric is reduced. This will happen during soaking and/or washing, where both water and soap act as lubricants. The lubricants, along with the mechanical action of the washer, help the fibres relax and contract (shrink) back to their original length.
One of the reasons that dry cleaning does not shrink natural fabrics is that the friction within the fabric is not reduced by dampening.
^One for the FAQ
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Dear gents,
in need of someone who owns this pair in sz 32, has washed/ soaked them and has worn them for a couple of months…
Would that person be so kind to give me measurements of his/ her pair (inc backrise, inseam if they've been hemmed, legopening and waist)?..
I'm wearing these in sz 33 and they're good but a little loose if anything... Wondering if a sz 32 would be ok for me... If they stretch an inch, it should be perfect (even though I'd have to wear them during the first hotsoak and not wash them for the first month or two)...
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Indecision and lack of available funds at the time the second run showed up equals no size 36. Any chance of a 36 lying around in Gosport or Japan unaccounted for? Will there be a 3rd run some point in the future? Or does someone have a pair that is relatively unused and not hemmed that they would like to part with?
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Thanks for the quick response G.
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hey seul…i have a 32. after soaking a couple times and wearing they measure 32 on the nose.
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One of the reasons that dry cleaning does not shrink natural fabrics is that the friction within the fabric is not reduced by dampening.
I hate to contradict the denim guru, but "dry cleaning" means cleaning using a solvent other than water, rather than not using any liquid at all. Dry cleaned clothes still soak in liquid (typically tetrachloroethylene).
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Because it doesn't use water. If you can find a CO2 cleaners, it is a superior technology and more environmentally friendly.
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That is not the reason. It is not water pre se that cause the shrinkage, read here:
http://www.ironheart.co.uk/forum/index.php?topic=4549.0
Soi implies that in dry cleaning the fabric gets wet, just not with water