January 22, 2020 4 min read 16 Comments
A BIENTOT
Shop for the best in French Antiques, furniture with the patina of age, vintage accessories to delight you and your family & friends, and French Country utilitarian pieces. Treasures that make your home fresh, beautiful, inspirational and uniquely yours. Visit our shop FrenchGardenHouse.comMarch 30, 2022
Edda, how exciting! Antique linens are delicate, but they were meant to be used. Some of the larger pieces do better when rolled up, and placed in acid free tissue. Above all, please do not store your antique linens in plastic, they need to breathe. I would gently hand wash and line dry the stiff towels, then iron on the back side. I hope you enjoy your beautiful treasures!
March 27, 2022
I love your advice on linens and silverware. I’ve been a collector for over ten years and have lots of antique table linen and Doyle’s. I’ve had them in wooden chests and boxes. Now I have decided to store them in my large linen cupboards and move out anything not of value or beauty. I do like to display some things on my furniture and swap them around now and then. I have linen embroidered bathroom towels from my great great grandmother, made in Italy and spun themselves. They have never been used and still stiff. If you have any advise for me please let me know. Kind regards, Edda Johansson.
July 17, 2021
Lidy,
Thank you for this recommendation. I will order it and try on soon.
July 15, 2021
Mary Ann, for most of my antique linens I use a gentle detergent that contains no chlorine. For tough stains, I soak in something called Mama’s Miracle Soak, this works wonders on yellowed linens too, without hurting the fibers. {https://mamasmiracle.com/} Just be sure that you don’t use bleach, because that really damages or yellows natural fibers of antique linens.
July 14, 2021
Lidy,
I love old linens too. I always feel I am preserving a small piece of past history when purchase them. They always reveal such beauty to me. I enjoy using them even though my friends think I am crazy because they require so much care. I wonder if you would share the name of the detergent you use to wash your antique linens
May 11, 2020
I hope I’m not damaging my linens by sending them out to be cleaned. I don’t have them go through machine washing, but just soaked and cleaned that way. They’re double damask linen (I think 50 years old), and while I’ve only had them a little over two years, they seem to be in excellent condition when I get them back. I don’t have a lot of space in this old house, nor do I trust myself with washing and ironing them. I do keep them lightly folded and in a drawer of a cabinet in my dining room that can accommodate all of them and my tablecloths. I have acid-free paper at the bottom of the drawer so they never touch the wood of the cabinet. In other drawers I keep silver serving pieces and silver flatware that won’t fit in my silver chest, also with the acid-free paper and silver anti-tarnish strips, and when I find them, I also put in those silica gel packets, which seems to keep my silver in great shape and almost never needs polishing, so hopefully this is also good for the linens.
January 29, 2020
Oh Nancy, I love that! I hope it brings you great joy….xoxo
January 23, 2020
Wonderful advice! And your captures show the exquisite details of each beautiful piece!
I just laid out a beautiful antique linen onto my coffee table to add beautiful detail to my Valentine Decor.
Thank you for another beautiful post!
January 23, 2020
You photos brought me joy on this cold, dreary day. I just opened my grandmother’s trunk of linens this morning. I am moving and will have to part with some of them. I have saved the very best for many years. Now, I must keep only the extremely rare and exquisitely made. My grandmother has been dead for over fifty years but I felt her hands today when i sorted the items that she lovingly made over 100 years ago. I mentioned some time ago that I inherited 16 steamer trunks of linens that she made for Italian brides’ trousseaus. I wish that I had a daughter or a niece that I could give these beautiful linens to. But my hope is that the woman who buys them will treasure and use them.
January 23, 2020
I love these old pieces and collected them in the 90’s from a lady that had a booth at the Denver Merchandise Mart during the twice a year antique show. She was featured in Victoria Magazine twice that I remember but I can’t remember her name. She taught me how to care for them and it’s the same as you say. I’ve enjoyed seeing them and using them on occasion. My husband lived in Africa for a while and the women there taught his wife at that time how to wash and whiten the linen by placing them after washing on wet grass in the sunlight. I tried that on some pieces and it worked to remove stains as well.
January 22, 2020
Such exquisite linens. Thank you for always giving us the most wonderful advice on how to care for our precious treasures.
January 22, 2020
Linda, thanks so much for your visit. That cloth is so beautiful, I really have never seen anything like it. It is so unusual, and to have the monogrammed napkins with it is a rare treat. Talk to you soon.
January 22, 2020
Thank you so much, Jackie. Hope you are keeping warm over there, and having a beautiful day!
January 22, 2020
Wonderful! I just love everything you share! Especially during these blue winter days! Thanks for making my day!
January 22, 2020
I will call this morning your time with credit card # for musician cloth.
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Lidy
March 30, 2022
Edda, how exciting! Antique linens are delicate, but they were meant to be used. Bigger pieces do better in storage rolled up, and covered with acid free tissue. Please don’t use plastic with antique linens, they need to breathe! As for the still unused towels, I suggest you gently hand wash them, line dry and carefully iron them again. I hope you enjoy your beautiful treasures!