
Washing fabrics
Reading care symbols, matching water temperature to fibre, sorting by colour and soil, and choosing detergent amounts that suit hard or soft water.
Open washing guide →West And Home collects practical notes on washing, drying, and storing the textiles common in Canadian homes — from cotton bedding and wool knitwear to linen and synthetic blends. The focus is on care that matches the label, the fibre, and the local climate.
Each guide stays close to fibre behaviour and care symbols rather than general tips, so the advice holds up across different garments and household textiles.

Reading care symbols, matching water temperature to fibre, sorting by colour and soil, and choosing detergent amounts that suit hard or soft water.
Open washing guide →
Choosing between line drying, flat drying, and tumble drying, plus handling cold and humid conditions that affect drying time through the Canadian winter.
Open drying guide →
Folding versus hanging, keeping wool and natural fibres away from moths and damp, and seasonal storage that prevents creases, yellowing, and mildew.
Open storage guide →A cotton shirt, a cotton towel, and cotton bedding share the same broad tolerances: they handle warm water and machine drying better than most fibres. Wool and silk, by contrast, react to heat and agitation regardless of the item they are made into.
Reading the fibre content alongside the care label is usually enough to avoid the most common problems — shrinking, stretching, fading, and pilling.
Care symbols follow ISO 3758 internationally; in Canada and the United States, garments often also carry the ASTM D5489 symbol guide. When both appear, the most cautious instruction is the safer one to follow.
Reach out with a question about a specific fabric or a correction to one of the notes. Fields submitted here are handled in your browser only and are not sent to a server.
General reference
This site keeps general fabric-care notes for households in Canada. For garment-specific guidance, the sewn-in care label is always the primary source.
Authoritative sources
Government of Canada publishes consumer and textile labelling information. Image material is drawn from Wikimedia Commons.
Last updated
May 2026