17-year-old Helena Muffly wrote exactly 100 years ago today:
Thursday, June 6, 1912: Utterly forgotten.
Her middle-aged granddaughter’s comments 100 years later:
Must have been a slow day . . .
I’m still reading a booklet that Proctor & Gamble published almost a hundred years ago on how to do laundry. A couple of days ago I told you about how clothes were ironed in the early 1900s. Many clothes needed to be starched before they were ironed.
Here are the abridged directions for starching clothes.
Starching
Aprons, shirtwaists, the trimming of underwear, etc. are starched. Make the starch according to the directions given below.
The amount of starch needed depends upon the number of garments to be starched. Those that should be stiffest must be starched first. Dry or thick materials take up more starch than wet or thin ones, and the starch may need to be thinned with water for some garments.
When only part of a garment is to be starched, gather that part into the hand and dip it into the starch, rub it well, then squeeze out the extra starch. This must be done by hand, the rest of the garment being held out with the rest. The starched pieces are hung out with the rest.
Thick Starch
Mix 1/2 cup starch and
1/2 cup cold water, add
¼ level teaspoonful shave white wax or lard and
4 cups (1 qt.) boiling water
Let it boil up several times to be sure that wax is melted and mixed and starch cooked. Add a little bluing and set dish in a pan of cold water until it is cool enough to handle.
Thin Starch
Mix 1/2 cup starch and
1/2 cup cold water, add
1/4 level teaspoonful lard or twice as much borax, stir smooth with
1/2 cup of cold, then stirring rapidly, add
3 pints of boiling water and continue stirring until it boils thoroughly. Have holder ready to lift it from the fire, or it will boil over. Add
1 pint of cold water to thin it and reduce the heat, and add enough bluing to counteract the yellow color of the starch. Turn starch into a large dish. If carefully made, it need not be strained.
Approved Methods for Home Laundering (1915)
As a reader commented on the post about ironing—thank goodness for spray starch. 🙂











