CleanBasket
Laundry care reference · Canada

Reading care labels, washing fabrics, and removing stains without guesswork.

CleanBasket collects the everyday details of textile care into one plain reference: what the symbols on a Canadian care label mean, how to set a routine for each fabric type, and which stain methods are worth trying at home.

A front-loading washing machine
Why a label matters

Care labels are a legal requirement on Canadian textiles

Under Canada's Textile Labelling Act and the Care Labelling Program, most consumer textiles sold in the country carry fibre content and care guidance. Many manufacturers use the ISO/ASTM care symbols, so learning the symbol set transfers across brands.

The symbols cover five operations in a fixed order: washing, bleaching, drying, ironing, and professional textile care. Reading them left to right gives a full routine for a garment.

  • WashingA tub of water; numbers or dots set the temperature ceiling.
  • BleachingA triangle; an open triangle allows any bleach.
  • DryingA square; a circle inside indicates tumble drying.
  • IroningAn iron shape; dots set the maximum plate temperature.
A textile care label printed with standard care symbols
A care label printed with standard textile care symbols. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Quick reference

Water temperature, in plain terms

Care labels in Canada often print temperatures in degrees Celsius inside the wash-tub symbol. The ranges below describe how the common settings are generally understood.

Label markingApproximate rangeTypical use
Coldaround 20°CBright colours, lightly soiled items, energy saving
Warmaround 30–40°CEveryday mixed loads, synthetics
Hotaround 50–60°CHeavily soiled cottons, household linens

The single dot, two dots, and three dots inside the wash-tub symbol correspond to rising temperature limits. When in doubt, the lower temperature is the safer choice for colour and shape retention.

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Questions or corrections

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CleanBasket · Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Email: contact@cleanbasket.pro