Vintage expert Linda Lindroth fills us in on vintage storage and maintenance techniques.
You may have found and repaired the perfect vintage dress, but once you've put so much effort into a retro treasure you'll want to find a way to keep it looking its best. Linda Lindroth, author of "Virtual Vintage: The Insider's Guide to Buying and Selling Fashion Online," gives us tips on making that antique piece last as long as possible.
Sweat Never Hurt Nobody? Yeah, right...
You'll be glad to hear that the old gym class mantra is completely wrong — in regards to vintage, anyway.
Lindroth
 says, "Anything I wear that I’ve perspired in (like if I went dancing 
in it), I dry clean right away. Perspiration can stain the garment and 
cause it to become brittle. When perspiration collects on old silk, for 
example, the fabric will get dry and brittle, and it can even 
fracture. If you look at the stained silk with light behind it, you'll 
actually see the warp and weft, the weaving, opening up. Those are 
little slits that have developed because perspiration had built up on 
the fabric."
But don't worry about that Big Night Out resulting 
in immediately ruined vintage pieces. Sweat needs to build up over a few
 years, even decades, before fabric fibers start to become frayed and 
damaged. Just know that this has a definite probability. 
Rotation Makes the World Go Round
Lindroth's best tip for protecting vintage clothes? Don't wear them. Or, at the very least, as Lindroth does, rotate them.
Rather
 than wearing the same vintage coat week after week, for example, 
consider switching off with a second or even third vintage jacket. 
You'll still be glam and your garments will last even longer.
In the Closet
When
 it comes to storing clothes, vintage can't be treated like that old 
V-neck T-shirt. While you don't have to seal up the garment in more 
plastic then a kid's holiday toy, Lindroth does recommend at least 
covering the top of the clothing, which she says prevents dust from 
settling on it while still allowing air to circulate around the garment
This
 air circulation, if you remember from eariler, is what Lindroth 
recommends for removing funk and other smells. So when storing your 
vintage clothes, be sure to keep them in closets that are open. "Closets
 should air," she says, "but watch out for moths. Martha Stewart has 
quite a few products good for storing vintage clothes, cedar on hooks 
and cedar balls that are not overly fragrant. These are good for keeping
 moths away."
Clothes stored in an aired closet are able to 
resist mildew and lingering smells much better than cloying fabric 
maskers like Febreeze.