Luxury Heritage Fashion | Garment Care
Dry Cleaning
Premium Embroidery
What every owner needs to know. From solvent chemistry to communication protocols, learn how to protect your hand-embroidered garments during professional cleaning.
Learn the ProtocolKey Takeaways
- Dry cleaning does not inherently damage premium embroidery, but incorrect dry cleaning does. The distinction depends on solvent, technique, and communication.
- Silicone-based solvents (GreenEarth) are the safest option; Perc is the most aggressive. Choose your solvent wisely.
- The 6-point communication protocol dramatically reduces the risk of damage by informing the cleaner of embroidery type, fabric, and stain specifics.
- Minimising frequency is the single most effective preservation strategy. Steaming and spot treating extend time between cleans.
- Wet cleaning is not safe for zardozi or metallic threads, as water causes oxidation and tarnishing.
Does dry cleaning damage embroidery? Dry cleaning does not inherently damage hand embroidery. When performed by a qualified cleaner using appropriate solvents and reduced agitation, dry cleaning removes contaminants without measurable impact. Damage occurs when the process is performed incorrectly, when the cleaner lacks information, or when cleaning is too frequent.
What Happens During Dry Cleaning?
Despite its name, dry cleaning uses liquid solvents. The process has four stages, each carrying specific risks to premium embroidery:
- Inspection: Should document existing loose threads or missing beads. Pre-existing damage must be noted.
- Pre-treatment: Concentrated spotting agents are more aggressive than the main solvent. If applied directly to embroidery, they can discolour metallic thread or dissolve sizing.
- Machine Cleaning: Mechanical agitation is the primary risk. Tumbling can snag threads, distort alignment, and abrade stitch work against the drum.
- Finishing: Heat and pressure applied directly can flatten zardozi work and crush velvet pile.
Solvent Types & Their Effects
Not all solvents are equal. Understanding differences allows you to make informed requests.
Perchloroethylene (Perc)
The industry standard. Effective and inexpensive, but aggressive. Safe for metallic zari, but can strip natural oils from silk and cause dye migration. Request a shortened cycle if used.
Hydrocarbon Solvent
Petroleum-based but gentler than perc. Operates at lower temperatures. Less likely to affect silk dyes or strip oils. Preferred over perc for embellished garments.
Silicone-Based (GreenEarth)
The gentlest commercially available option. Odourless, non-toxic, and non-reactive with metallic zari. Does not affect silk dyes. The safest choice for premium embroidery.
Wet Cleaning
Uses water and specialised detergents. Safe for resham on cotton, but not appropriate for zardozi or tilla, as water causes metallic threads to oxidise and tarnish.
| Solvent | Gentleness on Zari | Gentleness on Silk | Stain Power | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perc | Good | Moderate (dye risk) | Excellent | Standard |
| Hydrocarbon | Very Good | Good | Good | Moderate |
| Silicone | Excellent | Excellent | Moderate | Premium |
| Wet Cleaning | Poor (oxidation) | Good (if dye-stable) | Good | Moderate |
Embroidery Type Sensitivity
Zardozi Embroidery
Metallic zari is resistant to solvents, but the primary risk is mechanical. Tumbling can snag loose couching stitches, bend raised work, and abrade the surface. Request a mesh cleaning bag and a shortened cycle with reduced agitation.
Aari Embroidery
Aari chain-stitch construction is less secure; if a single stitch breaks, the entire chain can unravel. Garments with beads or sequins are especially vulnerable. Request minimal agitation and a mesh bag. Hydrocarbon or silicone cleaning is strongly preferred.
Tilla Embroidery
Tilla lies flat, reducing snagging risk but increasing surface abrasion risk. Tumbling rubs the flat wire against surfaces, gradually dulling the metallic sheen. Ask the cleaner to turn the garment inside out to protect the embroidered surface.
Resham (Silk) Embroidery
The most chemically sensitive type. Perc can cause dye migration and strip sericin coating, leaving threads brittle. Hydrocarbon or silicone solvents are significantly preferred. Wet cleaning is an option only if on a cotton base with no metallic work.
Garments Worth Preserving
Premium heritage fashion that deserves premium care. Explore our collection.
The 6-Point Communication Protocol
Identify the Embroidery Type
Tell the cleaner whether it is zardozi, aari, tilla, or resham, and whether it incorporates beads, sequins, or mirrors. Each requires different handling.
Identify the Fabric Base
Specify silk velvet, pure silk, wool, or cotton. The base determines solvent compatibility and drying temperature. Silk velvet requires cooler cycles.
Point Out Every Stain
Do not assume they will find it. Point to each one, describe the cause, and indicate if it is on the embroidery itself. This prevents unnecessary chemical exposure.
Disclose Cleaning History
Tell them when it was last cleaned and what solvent was used. Repeatedly perc-cleaned garments are more vulnerable and require a gentler approach.
Specify Processing Preferences
Explicitly request reduced agitation, a mesh bag, the gentlest solvent, and no direct pressing on embroidered areas. Do not leave this to assumption.
Note Existing Damage
Point out loose threads or lifting areas. Documenting pre-existing damage protects you and helps them handle vulnerable areas with care.
Alternatives to Dry Cleaning
Steaming
The primary alternative. Removes odours and relaxes creases without chemicals. Steam from the reverse side to refresh fabric without directing moisture into stitch work.
Spot Cleaning
Limits chemical exposure. Use a clean white cloth dampened with the appropriate solution. Blot gently from outside inward. Always test on an inconspicuous area first.
Airing & Brushing
For garments that have absorbed odours, airing in a well-ventilated space away from sunlight is remarkably effective. Follow with a soft-bristled brush.
Fabric Fresheners
Alcohol-free, fragrance-free formulations can neutralise odours. Spray from 12 inches away, avoiding direct application on embroidery. Always test first.
Expert Perspectives
“The embroidery I make today will be here in fifty years if it is treated with respect. Dry cleaning is not disrespect. Ignorance is disrespect. The difference is not the solvent. The difference is the communication.”
“Think of dry cleaning the way a dermatologist thinks of chemical peels: effective when needed, damaging when overused. Between cleanings, steam, spot treat, and store properly.”
Myths vs. Facts
Dry cleaning always damages hand embroidery.
When performed by a qualified cleaner using appropriate solvents and reduced agitation, dry cleaning removes contaminants without measurable impact. The risk is in the execution, not the process.
You should never dry clean zardozi.
Zardozi can be safely cleaned. The metallic zari is resistant to solvents, and professional cleaning removes oils that cause more long-term damage than the cleaning itself. Clean only when necessary.
Home cleaning is always safer.
Water damages silk velvet and causes metallic threads to oxidise. For significant soiling, professional dry cleaning is safer because the professional can control variables amateurs cannot.
Frequently Asked Questions
From the Journal
Fetching latest articles…