Textiles & home fabric care

Caring for household textiles in German homes

A neutral, English-language reference on common fabric types and how they are washed, dried, ironed and stored in everyday German households — built around care-label symbols and practical routines.

Close-up of woven cotton fabric
Woven cotton, one of the most common fibres in everyday home textiles.
Fabric basics

Knowing the fibre before the wash

Most laundry decisions follow from the fibre. Natural fibres such as cotton, linen, wool and silk each behave differently with water, heat and friction, which is why care labels and the GINETEX symbols printed on them matter.

Cotton

Absorbent and hard-wearing. Tolerates warm water and machine drying, but is prone to shrinkage on first hot washes and creases readily.

Linen

Made from flax, strong and breathable. It softens with use, creases visibly, and is usually washed cool and ironed while still damp.

Wool

Warm and elastic. Sensitive to heat, agitation and alkaline detergents, which can cause felting, so it is handled gently and often laid flat to dry.

Silk

A fine protein fibre with a natural sheen. Delicate when wet, sensitive to high heat and best handled with mild, dedicated detergents.

Synthetics

Polyester, polyamide and elastane blends dry quickly and resist creasing, but hold odours and can be damaged by high ironing temperatures.

Reading care labels

The standard wash-tub, triangle, iron, circle and square symbols indicate temperature, bleaching, ironing, professional cleaning and drying.


Everyday routine

Sorting, washing and drying

A consistent routine reduces wear and keeps colours intact. Sorting by colour, fibre and care temperature before loading the machine is the simplest way to avoid dye transfer and accidental shrinkage.

  • Sort firstSeparate whites, darks and delicates, and group items by the temperature on their labels.
  • Dose detergentMatch the dose to load size and local water hardness rather than overfilling the drawer.
  • Fill sensiblyLeave room in the drum; an overpacked machine cleans and rinses less effectively.
  • Dry with careAir-drying is gentle on fibres; tumble drying suits robust cottons but not most wool or silk.
Laundry drying on an outdoor washing line
In-home laundry stages

A simple wash-day sequence

Breaking the routine into clear stages makes it easier to match each step to the fabric in front of you.

Sort Pre-treat Wash Dry Store

Guides

Detailed care articles

Three focused guides covering the fabrics and tasks that come up most often in German households.

Printed cotton fabric
Cotton & Linen

Washing and ironing cotton and linen

Temperatures, shrinkage, and why linen is easier to iron slightly damp.

Read the guide →
Folded silk fabrics
Wool & Silk

Handling wool and silk gently

Felting, hand-washing, flat drying and low-heat care for delicate fibres.

Read the guide →
Skeins of dyed wool
Storage

Storing and airing household textiles

Keeping linens dry, ventilated and protected from moths over the seasons.

Read the guide →

Contact

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Last updated: 2026-05-28