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About Wet Cleaning

What is Wet Cleaning?

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, wet cleaning is the safest professional method of green dry cleaning available. Wet and dry cleaners utilize similar pressing equipment, but the washing processes are completely different. Wet cleaning uses special biodegradable detergents and fresh water to clean almost all garments that can be dry cleaned. Computerized washing machines control the amount of water, soap and agitation each load receives. After your items are clean, specialized dryers gently tumble dry garments at specific temperatures and humidity for set periods of time.  Some Houston dry cleaners may offer wet cleaning as a cleaning option.

How Did Wet Cleaning Start?

Technically, you could say people have been wet cleaning for as long as they’ve been wearing and washing their clothes. Professional wet cleaning technology was first developed in Germany in the early 1990s, and it was brought to the United States shortly after. Today, the wet cleaning process is used by thousands of cleaners across the country, and dozens of companies manufacture wet cleaning equipment and detergents.

Is Wet Cleaning The Same As Green Dry Cleaning?

Green dry cleaning generally refers to all processes of cleaning dry clean only garments without the use of perc as a cleaning solvent. Green cleaners dry cleaning methods include liquid CO2, liquid silicone and wet cleaning. Processes that use liquid CO2 or liquid silicone are considered green dry cleaning methods because they are a more environmentally safe method of cleaning than the those that utilize perc. Wet cleaning is widely considered the MOST green method for professionally cleaning clothes. Of all the shades of green, wet cleaning is the brightest.  Ask your Houston dry cleaner about wet cleaning today!

How Will My Clothes Turn Out?

Clothes that have been wet cleaned have a softer look and feel (and a much better smell) than clothes that have been dry cleaned, and the process can even be used with fabrics such as wools, silks, rayon and linen that require special treatment. After wet cleaning, your garments are hand-pressed and beautifully finished by experienced pressers.

Dry Cleaning Process

Not So Dry, Not So Clean

What is dry cleaning? A dry-cleaning machine works sort of like home washing machine combined with a clothes dryer. Most San Antonio dry cleaners use this process.

  1. First, garments are placed into a washing/extraction chamber. The chamber fills approximately one-third full of the solvent perchloroethylene (also called perc), and the chamber begins to rotate, pushing the solution through the clothing.
  2. Most wash cycles last between 8-15 minutes (depending on the fabric type and soil level). During the wash cycle, the perc solution is repeatedly passed through a filtration chamber to remove dirt and grease before being fed back into the wash chamber. This same perc solution will be used throughout the week to clean thousands of garments. As a general rule of thumb, the cheaper your cleaner the less frequently they use new fresh perc. Dry cleaners cut cost by using their perc as long as possible… yuck!
  3. During the first three minutes of the wash cycle, the perc dissolves the solvent-soluble soils and loosens debris. Approximately ten to twelve minutes into the wash cycle, the ground-in insoluble soils begin to loosen from the fabric fibers. All of the dirt is trapped in the machine’s sludge filter.
  4. After swishing around with all that well-used perc and soil, the garments are rinsed with fresh distilled solvent. The machine then begins the extraction process to recover 99.99% of the solvent for reuse.
  5. In the drying cycle, warm air is passed through the clothes and then through a chiller unit that condenses the solvent vapors and returns them to the distilled solvent tank to be reused—again and again and again.

Dangers of Perc

PERC = CRAP

Most people don’t stop to think, what is dry cleaning and is it safe?

What is Perc?

The chemical tetrachloroethylene (perchloroethylene)—commonly called perc—is a central nervous system depressant. It can enter the body through inhaling, touching the skin or through contaminated drinking water. There are more 35,000 garment cleaners in the United States, and more than 85% of them use perc as their primary cleaning agent.

Are They Sure Perc is Bad?

Yep. California declared perc a toxic chemical in 1991, and its use will become illegal in that state in 2023. The EPA has classified perc as a hazardous air contaminant, and both the EPA and the International Agency for Research on Cancer have classified perc as “likely to be a human carcinogen.”

Because of these classifications, federal law requires dry cleaners to handle perc as a hazardous waste, and cleaners have to take special precautions against site contamination. In fact, many landlords refuse to have dry cleaning facilities in their buildings because of the danger to other tenants and resulting remediation. Perc is such an effective solvent that if it’s exposed to the ground, it will penetrate concrete and soil and not stop until it hits ground water.

What Does Perc Do To People?

Bad stuff. Minimal exposure to perc can cause people to experience dizziness, headaches, drowsiness, nausea, and skin and respiratory irritation. Prolonged exposure has been linked to neurological effects, liver and kidney damage, and cancer. These dangers are not only for people who work in the dry cleaning, but for consumers who bring home supposedly clean clothes that are actually contaminated with perc.

What Happens To All That Spilled Perc?

It’s all around us. A 2001 Greenpeace report found that 70% of all perc used for cleaning ends up in the environment. Studies have found perc in more than 50% of all Superfund sites, and a federal survey found perc in more than 26% of U.S. groundwater supplies, in concentrations reaching hundreds of times the acceptable limit established by the Safe Drinking Water Act.

How Much Perc is Too Much?

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has found that clothes dry cleaned with perc can elevate levels of the toxin throughout a home and especially in the room where the garments are stored. Breastfeeding mothers who are exposed to perc may transfer it to their infants via breast milk. Dry cleaners located in residential areas risk exposing neighboring businesses and residents to an increased cancer risk, as high as 140 to 190 in 1,000,000.

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