Deleted
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Nov 1, 2024 10:30:17 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Nov 14, 2022 14:18:01 GMT
DH has been complaining our towels have a "smell" after he dries off. I don't smell it, but it bothers him enough that he will only use a towel once and then puts it in the hamper. I wash our towels separately from the rest of our laundry - have all of the oder killing stuff to put in the machine, but it is still a problem.
So...suggestions for how to keep towels smelling fresh?
And suggestions for which bath sheets we should be looking at to buy? Perhaps something quick drying? I'm not opposed to buying new, but want them to last for a while.
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StephDRebel
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,707
Location: Ohio
Jul 5, 2014 1:53:49 GMT
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Post by StephDRebel on Nov 14, 2022 14:21:46 GMT
Run them in a load with just white vinegar and hot water to get all the detergent from them.
Do you ever strip your towels? I know the smell he means, it's almost sour and usually the people I stay with don't notice it all all.
I believe I've read it's from laundry chemical build up
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Post by bluebird71 on Nov 14, 2022 14:27:10 GMT
Huh. I have never smelled anything on my towels and I use them a few times before washing. I do bleach mine once in a while [they are colored]. People also like to use scent boosters in their wash
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Post by CardBoxer on Nov 14, 2022 14:27:25 GMT
It could be any number of things, and not knowing exactly what you do or your products, think this article probably covers what you can do. She participates monthly in an organizing group I’m in and is so knowledgable, no nonsense and likes simplifying all things cleaning. cleanmyspace.com/make-your-towels-loo-feel-and-smell-great/
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Post by iamkristinl16 on Nov 14, 2022 14:34:11 GMT
I need ideas as well. I just bought all new towers a few months ago because of the smell, but the new ones are already starting to smell like the old ones. I also bought some at home goods that were supposed to be quick drying but they didn’t dry for several days. I returned the ones we didn’t use.
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Post by leslie132 on Nov 14, 2022 14:34:28 GMT
My MIL said to add vinegar into the water early in the wash. That helps kill the odor and then the wash/ softener will leave them smelling like new.
Yeah…… that didn’t happen. I threw away every towel that we had an odor issue with. I was afraid eventually the other towels would start to smell, but they haven’t. I bought towels at Kohls. Nothing major. Just new. We haven’t had the problem since!
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MorningPerson
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 2,549
Location: Central Pennsylvania
Jul 4, 2014 21:35:44 GMT
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Post by MorningPerson on Nov 14, 2022 14:37:55 GMT
Bleach takes care of it. I use it in every load of towels.
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Post by littlemama on Nov 14, 2022 14:39:08 GMT
The smell is usually because the towels arent getting completely dry. To get rid of the smell, use vinegar and soak them. Going forward, dont let them sit in the washer, get them right in the dryer and make sure they are completely dry before you take them out.
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Post by librarylady on Nov 14, 2022 14:40:22 GMT
Another vote for giving the towels a trip through the wash cycle with no detergent but about a cup of vinegar in the wash and rinse water.
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pantsonfire
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Take a step back, evaluate what is important, and enjoy your life with those who you love.
Posts: 6,169
Jun 19, 2022 16:48:04 GMT
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Post by pantsonfire on Nov 14, 2022 14:48:11 GMT
Vinegar and water never got rid of the funky smell my towels developed.
I used that Clorox disinfecting wash add in and it worked very well.
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Post by Zee on Nov 14, 2022 15:24:08 GMT
Use a half cup of bleach every so often. The smell is a mildewy smell from the towels sitting around damp. Bleach will kill that mildew.
If you bleach them all the time colors will fade but once in a while should be ok for most towels.
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samantha25
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Posts: 3,103
Jun 27, 2014 19:06:19 GMT
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Post by samantha25 on Nov 14, 2022 15:53:33 GMT
I also noticed that if you are cooking aromatics, like onions/garlic the odors seep into towels that are drying after using. Anyone else notice this?
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Post by gillyp on Nov 14, 2022 16:13:15 GMT
The smell is usually because the towels arent getting completely dry. To get rid of the smell, use vinegar and soak them. Going forward, dont let them sit in the washer, get them right in the dryer and make sure they are completely dry before you take them out. I agree with this and if you dry them overnight, the drier could have finished before they are completely dry and although they are dry when you take them out, it's from the residual heat in the drier over a few additional hours so they will still smell. I add a lidful of fabric bleach (called Ace over here) to every towel wash, it doesn't fade the colors but helps keep them looking and smelling good.
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Elsabelle
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Posts: 3,680
Jun 26, 2014 2:04:55 GMT
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Post by Elsabelle on Nov 14, 2022 16:35:55 GMT
Wash in hot water with bleach, color safe bleach if your towels are not white, and use a long, hot dryer cycle.
ETA I never have this problem with my white towels because bleach and thorough drying is the best way to go.
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Deleted
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Nov 1, 2024 10:30:17 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Nov 14, 2022 16:41:12 GMT
Toss them in the dryer after each use. I used to go through towels quickly (soggy WA state) then discovered that drying them every time has resulted in zero smell after almost 5 years. In the new house, we'll have a heated towel rack, as well.
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Post by crazy4scraps on Nov 14, 2022 16:48:11 GMT
When I wash towels, I pour about a cup of vinegar right into the drum, throw the towels in, add more vinegar to the soap compartment where the fabric softener would go and wash them on HOT. No soap. Never use fabric softener on towels, it will make them smell funky fast and be less absorbent. If they still smell funky, you can repeat the vinegar wash with 3/4 cup vinegar where the soap goes and a half cup of baking soda in the drum with the towels. This does work because I’ve done it many times.
Another thing that will help keep your clean laundry smelling fresh is to make sure to clean the gunk out of your washer’s filter periodically, I usually do it every 2-3 months. It gets NASTY with mucky black stinky gunk. Wipe down the door gasket and leave the door open and the little door where the soap goes between loads so those areas can dry out completely. Stinky washer = stinky laundry even when it’s supposedly “clean.”
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paget
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Jun 25, 2014 21:16:39 GMT
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Post by paget on Nov 14, 2022 17:09:40 GMT
My answer is probably not going to be anyones solution but it’s what I have to do for my sanity. 😂 dh and I have separate towels. Yep. Our towels always smelled mildewy to me when wet - it’s because dh is not good about letting them air out. I am very careful with it and my towels smells great- no issues. His continue to smell. I tried all the tips and nothing worked. I’m not going to bother buying new towels when he doesn’t even notice and it would just happen again because his habits haven’t changed. The his/hers towels get washed separately. Yep, that’s my solution. 😂 oh, another benefit to my own towels is they don’t get all raggedy. I don’t know what he is doing to his towels for them to get they way (again, it doesn’t bother him).
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Post by Darcy Collins on Nov 14, 2022 17:22:10 GMT
Depending on your climate, towel rack configuration and thickness of towels, they may not be drying quickly enough for multiple uses without smelling funky. When we lived in a more humid climate, a heated towel rack made a huge difference - and of course you get used to warm towels when you get out of the shower so now it's pretty much a necessity regardless of climate. I also only use white towels so I can bleach periodically and always wash on hot water and dry completely in the dryer.
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Post by greendragonlady on Nov 14, 2022 17:22:13 GMT
I use vinegar, too...but I don't think our towels are overly smelly to start with. Years ago I used to hang out with a couple who had a pool. The towels would always sit around wet. The clean towels ALWAYS smelled musty, and your body would smell like that when you used them. I hated it, but they couldn't smell it (I'm assuming because they were just used to it)
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RosieKat
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Jun 25, 2014 19:28:04 GMT
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Post by RosieKat on Nov 14, 2022 17:38:40 GMT
I used that Clorox disinfecting wash add in and it worked very well. I started using that in every load of laundry at the dermatologist's recommendation, because DH and DD develop athlete's foot & other related problems very easily. Since you can't always bleach everything it has been a great solution (and has helped them a lot, too). I broke down years ago and only buy white towels, etc. for the bathroom and kitchen. That way I can reliably run them through a hot water and bleach cycle, and don't have the smelly towel problem. I do have a problem if they don't dry completely, as previously mentioned, whether in the dryer or with regular use. DD swims/teaches swimming/plays water polo so she goes through towels like crazy. She "inherited" all the old colored towels and beach towels. We run them with hot water and the Lysol sanitizer and haven't had a problem. Very occasionally we do, but that's because she's bad about hanging them up to dry and will leave them in her swim bag for days. Even so, the Lysol usually seems to do the trick.
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Post by papersilly on Nov 14, 2022 17:48:21 GMT
is the smell from mildew because the towel didn't completely dry from previous use or does it smell straight from the wash? if straight from the wash, it may need a good hot water/vinegar/ baking soda soak and wash. if it's after a previous use, it may not be airing out completely and getting mildew on it.
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Post by myshelly on Nov 14, 2022 17:50:37 GMT
is the smell from mildew because the towel didn't completely dry from previous use or does it smell straight from the wash? if straight from the wash, it may need a good hot water/vinegar/ baking soda soak and wash. if it's after a previous use, it may not be airing out completely and getting mildew on it. I agree with this. You need to work with DH to identify whether the problem is the clean towels smell straight out of the dryer, whether the clean towels smell straight out of the linen cupboard, or whether towels that have already been used smell upon subsequent uses. I would address each of those problems in a different way.
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Post by malibou on Nov 14, 2022 17:52:09 GMT
iowgirl recommended Persil laundry soap, and that fixed my problem all the way up until I decided to laundry strip my towels. After I stripped them, their absorbency is crap, and they start to smell quickly. I got rid of those towels and bought Turkish towels. I freaking love them! However, Dh not so much. I did a search about towels smelling and read an article that talked about something in the processing these days that just seems to funkify towels (I don't remember what all it was about). I went to a couple of estate sales, and bought towels that were old, but had been used only decoratively. They absorb. They don't stink. And my Persil laundry soap leaves them smelling fresh. I still use my Turkish towels, and Dh is happy with his "old lady" towels. 😂
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Post by twinks on Nov 14, 2022 18:17:43 GMT
I used Lysol Sanitizer every wash. Occasionally I use bleach but since Lysol came around, I do that less and less.
I don’t use fabric softeners on towels. I heard they don’t absorb or dry as well.
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Post by padresfan619 on Nov 14, 2022 18:21:01 GMT
If he’s putting the damp towel in the hamper that’s probably the issue. Even if a towel is ready to be washed unless I’m taking it directly to the washing machine I allow my towels to dry completely before putting them in the hamper.
I use scent free detergent, borax, vinegar in the softener compartment and dry without dryer sheets.
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Deleted
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Nov 1, 2024 10:30:17 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Nov 14, 2022 18:39:54 GMT
So...I am already using Percyl...and the Lysol laundry sanitizer and the scent beads. LOL
Thanks for the suggestions about making sure the washer is clean and the vinegar. I will start with those.
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Post by revirdsuba99 on Nov 14, 2022 19:09:31 GMT
If he’s putting the damp towel in the hamper that’s probably the issue. Even if a towel is ready to be washed unless I’m taking it directly to the washing machine I allow my towels to dry completely before putting them in the hamper. I use scent free detergent, borax, vinegar in the softener compartment and dry without dryer sheets. Correct! Damp/wet towels do not belong in a hamper!
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zztop11
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Oct 10, 2014 0:54:51 GMT
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Post by zztop11 on Nov 14, 2022 19:12:54 GMT
The smell is usually because the towels arent getting completely dry. To get rid of the smell, use vinegar and soak them. Going forward, dont let them sit in the washer, get them right in the dryer and make sure they are completely dry before you take them out. That is so true. They really need to be dried past what you think is dry. Moisture gets trapped in all of the little loops. Between the bit of moisture and the dark cabinet they are stored in, it can be a smelly mess.
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Post by birukitty on Nov 14, 2022 19:29:32 GMT
I know what you all are talking about. It is the scent of mold or mildew as another Pea suggested. I think some people can smell it (I can easily smell it and it drives me nuts) while others can barely smell it and it doesn't bother them. I started noticing it about a year ago-first on our kitchen towels and later on our bath towels.
Did a little research online and came across this product: Enviroklenz Laundry Enhancer. It really works to get the smell out of my towels but I noticed that on our towels I have to sometimes repeat the treatment. It involves adding a half a cup of this product to the washing cycle with the towels and letting it soak for a half an hour before the cycle begins.
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Post by flanz on Nov 14, 2022 19:31:54 GMT
The smell is usually because the towels arent getting completely dry. To get rid of the smell, use vinegar and soak them. Going forward, dont let them sit in the washer, get them right in the dryer and make sure they are completely dry before you take them out. Oh, I know that smell. Have experienced it with towels and sheets in my linen closet and I recently had that musty smell on a deep drawer full of sleepwear (flannel pants, etc) and presoaked twice. It used a lot of water and took a long time, but it worked! First I presoaked with several cups of vinegar added to the load, then washed normally using warm water. Next I did the same with 1-2 cups of baking soda added to the load, then washed normally using warm water. FINALLY I did a normal wash. Saved all of my stuff! I recently bought new towels that are really thin and love them because they dry quickly. They were on clearance at BBB for $3.50 each. I'm obviously not someone who needs thick fluffy towels... I find them a nuisance.
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