How can you make towels as soft and fluffy as they used to be?
A method of softening old towels without chemicals is to use a dryer, ball, or tennis ball in a dryer to dry towels at a low temperature. This prevents clothing from being clustered together, keeps air circulating, and prevents them from doing too quickly. In general, any dry towels, should use the dryer ball placed in the fabric softener, because fabric softener in chemicals will cover the towel fiber, and make them reduce the adsorption capacity.
Many washing experts recommend washing towels separately from other clothes, because buttons and zippers can easily wear towels. When washing, do not plug the washing machine too full, so that towels have enough space to move. In addition, use the recommended hot water rinse and always rinse with cold water.
Can also be added to the water softener for cleaning old towels, which due to the hard water caused stiff towel is particularly effective. Another method is to add 110 grams of borax and 280 grams of sodium carbonate in hot water. When the powder is dissolved and cooled, pour into a two liter volume of water bottle and fill it up with water. It's also good to use this solution for old towels.
Adding a cup (0.23 liters) of ammonia or vinegar to rinse often makes old towels soft. Ammonia can peel off the accumulated detergent and soften the fabric; distilled white vinegar also removes minerals from hard water. In the final rinse stage, vinegar can soften the fibers of the towel. If the towel smells bad, try adding 110 grams of baking soda. Rinse it separately. But don't mix baking soda with vinegar or ammonia water, so it doesn't work.