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S/o Coping: Washing tzitzis



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amother
OP


 

Post Today at 2:20 pm
All the coping threads got me thinking. I feel like I've made a lot of progress and my house is really run well at this point. Linens get washed, laundry gets folded, etc. Definitely an improvement.

Except tzitzis. I have a really hard time washing my son's tzitzis and keep pushing it off. How often do I need to do this for it to be fair to him? He has quite a few pairs. Maybe if I had a hard number and it wasn't too overwhelming I could be on top of that also.

Also, I never wash Yarmulkes - is that also normal?
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amother
Impatiens


 

Post Today at 2:28 pm
I haven't washed a kappel in 11 months because I never found it in the dirty laundry. If it needs to be cleaned, he should put it in the hamper.

Tzitzis I clean every 7 days. If not, it is hard to get the stains out. I don't even know how my husband's tzitzis become stained, but they do. Even though he always has a vest and a rekel. They aren't so difficult to clean. I spray the stains with shout and then I soak in lestoil for 30-45 minutes. I take out and spray with iron out. If I still see any discoloration I will soak in iron out for 10-15 minutes. If they look nice, I will wash on delicate. If not, I'll soak them in milk. It doesn't require I do very much except for set a timer so I do it at a time I know I'll be home.
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mfb




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 2:30 pm
What type of tzitzis, cotton or wool?
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amother
Marigold


 

Post Today at 2:48 pm
Kippah, my husband gets a new one usually every haircut. 6-8 weeks. He claims you can already see it's old. -im just glad it's not every 4 weeks like he did when we got married.
My son is 5 he has a whole bunch of cheap ones and I never wash them. I can see on others who put there kippah in the machine they start to not look so great very quick.
When it starts looking bad I put it at the bottom of the pile for emergencies. His first kippah after his Chalaka was expensive and I washed it, it looked terrible, wasn't wearable -learnt from my expensive mistake!!!

DH whenever I find tzitzit when doing a white wash I put them in - he wears cotton.
DS 2-3 times a week I put it in the hamper (summer usually more often) and it gets washed with the kids white wash. He wears cotton or vest tzitzit.
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amother
Hydrangea


 

Post Today at 2:50 pm
Only soft kippahs can be washed. The hard velvet ones cannot.
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kenz




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 3:28 pm
amother Hydrangea wrote:
Only soft kippahs can be washed. The hard velvet ones cannot.

I wash them on delicate and they’re fine. The dryer is the kiss of death though.
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imaima




 
 
    
 

Post Today at 3:33 pm
amother OP wrote:
All the coping threads got me thinking. I feel like I've made a lot of progress and my house is really run well at this point. Linens get washed, laundry gets folded, etc. Definitely an improvement.

Except tzitzis. I have a really hard time washing my son's tzitzis and keep pushing it off. How often do I need to do this for it to be fair to him? He has quite a few pairs. Maybe if I had a hard number and it wasn't too overwhelming I could be on top of that also.

Also, I never wash Yarmulkes - is that also normal?


Like any laundry, the frequency depends on how many you have.
The point is not to wash often enough, the point is to have tzitzis.
And really tzittis and yarmulke should not be equal with food and bathing. CPS won’t take your kids away if these items are not up to par
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amother
Bronze


 

Post Today at 3:43 pm
Okay, I'm going to admit it (anonymously, of course).

I have several boys, and I don't wash their tzitzis. Or yarmulkes. Ever.

Why? Because when we first got married, my husband told me he'd wash his own tzitzis when they needed to be washed. I bought him a bottle of Woolite for this purpose. It never got used. At some point I asked him about it, and he said that wool tzitzis can just be left to "air out" and don't need to be washed...Being a newly-married woman who felt that she had to right this wrong, I got instructions from someone on how to wash tzitzis in Woolite, and they looked fine to me, but he thought I had ruined them and asked me to please not wash them again.

When my oldest son got his first pair of tzitzis, I decided to do a lot of research before washing them. THey were cotton after all, so they didn't fit dh's "wool doesn't need to be washed" rule. Life was busy, so they didn't get washed as often as they should have, but when they did I tried several different "tricks" -- including store-bought tzitzis savers, a knee high, and some others. No matter what I did, they looked "old" after I washed them once. As the boys got older, they would kvetch whenever I washed their tzitzis.

It took several years of very infrequent attempts to wash them until I finally gave up. So yes. Their tzitzis don't get washed.

Yarmulkes--when they were little and they got very dirty, we found these "washable yarmulkes" that washed well. Black velvet and all. They don't make them anymore, and my now-bochrim do not like for them to be washed. They'lll sometimes wet them slightly if they fall in the dirt. That's all.

Let the tomato-throwing begin.
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