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Professional garment care
dates back to the days of Pompeii when early cleaners were called
“fullers.” They used lye and ammonia in early laundering and a type of
clay called “fuller’s earth” to absorb soils and greases from clothing
too delicate for laundering.
While 1690 is the first published reference to the use of turpentine for
removing tar and varnish from fabrics, it wasn’t until 1716 that
turpentine began to be used regularly as a “drycleaner” for grease and
oil stains to supplement wet cleaning processes. Down through the ages,
turpentine, a distillation of pine pitch, has had several names: oil of
turpentine, spirits of turpentine, camphene, and “turps.”
Even before organic solvent was used to clean garments by immersion
methods, the cleaner of clothes was known as a “degraisseur”, a
degreaser of textiles able to remove grease and fat stains from cloth.
The French name for cleaner was teinturier-degraisseur (a
dryer-degreaser). “Degraisseur” was the common term applied to a master
dryer who specialized in both dyeing and cleaning garments.
In the early 1900s, drycleaners began using spirits of turpentine,
called “camphene,” as a drycleaning solvent. The firm, Jolly-Belin in
Paris, France, is credited with spearheading the first successful use of
spirits of turpentine as a commercial drycleaning solvent. This
discovery quickly spread to other countries on the continent and later
to the British Isles, led by John Pullar and Sons in Perth, Scotland.
The new process became known as “French Cleaning,” named for the earlier
reputation and fame gained in France. This term continues to be used
today to imply that the process is special and requires highly skilled
handwork.
Today, the drycleaner’s goal is to safely clean the fabric and preserve
the color of the garment. A second aim is to restore the garment to a
nearly new condition. Drycleaning is defined by the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) in the Care Label Rules as:
· Use of a specially designed machine.
· Use of a solvent.
· Relative humidity levels up to 75 percent.
· Tumble dry temperatures up to 160ºF
· Steam press or steam air finish.
A dry-cleaning machine is specially designed with respect to the
chemical properties of the solvent being used while taking into account
relative humidity and tumble dry temperatures. Garments are put into a
drycleaning machine when they are dry and are taken out when they are
dry even though they come in contact with a solvent during the wash
cycle. Thus, garments are “dry cleaned”. When clean garments are taken
from a dry-cleaning machine, commercial steam presses and steam air
finishers are used to press and finish the garments. |