I don't have a laundry service at work; I do my own towels (but we use more paper towels and less side towels) and aprons because I have a huge capacity washer and dryer and both have a sanitizing cycle. We have only about 5 dozen white aprons with long ties, but the most I am washing at any given time is about 15- 18.
I try to put in a few large bath towels that I don't care about (I get a little overzealous with the bleach if truth be told) so the apron ties don't get too tangled up, but they do and I am getting tired of all the untangling. Even if I untangle them after the wash, they're just as badly tangled when they come out of the dryer.
Any ideas?
Washing a LOT of aprons and not getting the strings tied!
Started by
JeanneCake
, May 06 2012 10:36 AM
4 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 06 May 2012 - 10:36 AM
#2
Posted 06 May 2012 - 10:55 AM
The ties are probably less dirty than the fronts, yes? Have you tried tying them together in a simple, loose one-loop knot behind the aprons before you toss them in? That's what I do with my aprons (although admittedly I only wash 5-8 at a time, that being how many I've got.) It works very well - the ties come out clean but they don't tangle or get weird in either washer or drier.
Elizabeth Campbell, baking 10,000 feet up at 1° South latitude.
My eG Food Blog (2011) ⋆ My eG Foodblog (2012)
My eG Food Blog (2011) ⋆ My eG Foodblog (2012)
#3
Posted 06 May 2012 - 12:02 PM
I put aprons into a zipped mesh bag and then have no trouble with the long ties. ...but then I wash not more than two at a time...
Darienne
learn, learn, learn...
Cheers & Chocolates
learn, learn, learn...
Cheers & Chocolates
#4
Posted 06 May 2012 - 01:27 PM
What great ideas, thank you! Tying the strings and using mesh bags will definitely keep me from going nuts untangling strings
#5
Posted 06 May 2012 - 02:01 PM
For very long apron strings, I pair the strings and fold them in half.
Then I tie an overhand knot at the center with all 4 strands as one, BUT instead of pulling the end free I leave it as a little loop and tighten the beginning of the knot around this loop. This will hold through the wash and dry, and release easily.
Then I tie an overhand knot at the center with all 4 strands as one, BUT instead of pulling the end free I leave it as a little loop and tighten the beginning of the knot around this loop. This will hold through the wash and dry, and release easily.









