You'd want to handle it very gently, under monitored and controlled conditions in
a heavily bonded commercial laboratory, under observation by archaeologists and
materials experts as well as professional dry cleaners, and a Smithsonian curator
might also be a wise addition to the group. Under no circumstances must you ever
consider wearing such a garment. What you've got there is definitely a rarity and
possibly one of a kind, comprised of a fabric synthesized of materials that add up
to 150 percent !
almost 20 percent of the world does not have access to clean water
No it's not ! It's filtered through hygienically clean, artificial filters.
60 to 80 percent to make clean, ethical kills , anything less than 50 percent is unethical and may not kill the animal it may just run away and suffer
Yes, it can be. But normally the adverb is cleanly. Colloquially, clean may be misused to mean "cleanly."However, it can be used to mean "until clean" and is an adverb in these cases.Examples:"wipe the slate clean""scrub the floor clean""wash the dishes clean"
just clean it
Yes, The garment is made from white or light-colored cotton, linen, or cotton polyester blend, allowing it to be washed at high temperature and make it easy to see if it is clean.
you clean raw cotton with take it to the gin.
It depends on the garment and the garment's care label. Generally, yes, but not always.
It means you just clean the dirty spot, not the whole garment.
cotton gin
Cotton is easy to clean because the cotton can be washed at any temperature safely. Cotton does not get damaged in hot water like other fabrics can.
Sea Island Cotton
The Cotton Gin
Sea Island Cotton
yes
I have to clean it
Rub toothpaste on it with a cotton ball then clean off with another clean cotton ball then dry it off