How to Wash, Dry, and Store Handmade Knitted Baby Clothes (Complete Care Guide)
· 5 min read · Care Guide · By Chinki
A handmade knitted baby garment can last through multiple children — but only if you care for it properly. Here's everything: washing, drying, storing, stain removal, and the mistakes that ruin knits fast.
You spent good money on a handmade knitted baby garment — or someone who loves your baby did. The organic cotton and merino wool used in hand-knitted pieces respond beautifully to gentle care, and poorly to everything else. This guide covers the specifics.
Washing: The Rules That Matter
Hot water is the enemy. It shrinks knits, breaks down natural fibres, and can felt wool irreversibly. Cold water (30°C or below) on a gentle cycle preserves both the shape and the softness of the fabric.
- Machine wash on gentle or delicate cycle — cold water only (30°C max)
- Place the garment in a mesh laundry bag to prevent snagging
- Use a baby-safe or wool-safe detergent — no bleach, no enzymes, no fabric softener
- Wash similar colours together to prevent dye transfer
- For stubborn stains, spot-treat with mild soap before washing — don't scrub the knit
Drying: Why Flat Drying Is Non-Negotiable
Never hang a wet knit garment. Water adds weight, and gravity stretches the fabric permanently. The arms get longer, the neckline droops, and the shape you paid for is gone.
- Roll the garment in a clean towel and press gently to absorb excess water
- Lay flat on a dry towel, reshape to original dimensions
- Keep away from direct sunlight, radiators, and tumble dryers
- Allow to air dry naturally — typically 12–24 hours depending on humidity
Storage: Fold, Don't Hang
Hangers distort knits over time — the shoulder points stretch, and the garment develops a permanent hanger shape. Fold your knitted pieces neatly and store them in a breathable cotton bag or a clean drawer.
- Never store in plastic bags — trapped moisture causes mildew
- Cedar balls or lavender sachets protect wool from moths naturally
- Store in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight to prevent fading
How Long Should Handmade Knits Last?
With proper care, hand-knitted organic cotton garments last through multiple children. The fibres are inherently durable and get softer with each wash — the opposite of synthetic fabrics that pill, thin out, and lose colour. We regularly hear from families passing Knitting Knife pieces to younger siblings and cousins, still in beautiful condition.
The Three Things That Ruin Knits Fastest
- Hot water washing — causes irreversible shrinkage and felting in wool
- Tumble drying — the heat and tumbling action breaks down fibres and distorts shape
- Hanging while wet — gravity stretches the garment permanently
Avoid these three and your handmade knits will outlast everything else in the baby's wardrobe.
Written by Chinki — Knitting Knife, Himachal Pradesh, India.