I would leave it alone and not clean it.
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Washing Tunics
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Woolite is used primarily for delicate fabrics that have gotten a light use, like a woman's dress that was worn once and has a perfume smell to it and minor perspiration stains - and needs to be cleaned but really just very lightly cleaned. There is a product known as Fulsol which I recommend very highly. It is a degreaser, and removes the greasy dirt that a 65 year old uniform tends to acquire from dust, perspiration, being in a footlocker with bayonets and stuff, etc. I use it to gently clean the greasy dirt from the silk handle wrapping of Samurai swords, as well as US Army web belts that have gotten thick and smelly with greasy dirt - and the occasional patch as well. I much prefer it to Woolite.
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The flight suit in my opinion is a lot more complicated as far as trying to clean it and you are dealing with several different materials. I personally would never hand wash that. I would take it to an experienced dry cleaner and ask what they think. There are a lot of clowns in the business and it took me years to find someone who knew what they are doing within the gum snapping newspaper reading "yeah yeah sure" majority.
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Originally posted by Johnny R View PostI know that some of you are against washing any tunic regardless of condition but I wanted to post this. I did not take a before picture but the tunic had no visible surface dirt and looked clean. This is how much crap was in there after the first soak and rinse without soap. There was a oil like film on the surface as well that I attribute to moth balls or some spray that smelled like that.
How long you let the tunic soak under cold water, without Woolite and with it?
-MAT
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Every unifrom is different and the name tag problem has been mentioned, I have washed tunics with a quick dip with no effect to name tags BUT soaking them greatly increases the chance the ink will wash out.
I have never soaked a tunic for a long period of time, maybe 10 minutes. I normally just put it warm water and then knead the cloth under water so the soap works through the cloth and the dirt comes out.
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Originally posted by Johnny R View PostI use warm and things do not shrink etc. I think it cleans better and opens the cloth but maybe that is my imagination.
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That is a spectacular flight suit Werner, I think were it me, I would not clean it yourself, or at all. This suede can be quite delicate, and it could be torn/ruined. Not worth the risk in my opinion, but, its your piece! you could take a nice hand held attachment for a good vacuum cleaner and use it to gently bring out the dust...I've done this on similar types of suits, you will be surprised how much dust comes out of the fibres, and you dont risk damage to the suede, which can become brittle over time. Just use some caution.Last edited by Scott A. Hess; 11-18-2009, 02:23 AM.
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