How to Keep Your Corteiz Clothing Clean

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Corteiz pieces are hard to get and harder to replace. Whether it's a Bolo puffer, a graphic tee, or an Alcatraz cargo — proper care is the difference between a piece that lasts years and one that fades after a few washes. This guide covers everything you need to know.

Corteiz pieces are hard to get and harder to replace. Whether it's a Bolo puffer, a graphic tee, or an Alcatraz cargo — proper care is the difference between a piece that lasts years and one that fades after a few washes. This guide covers everything you need to know.

Step one

Always read the care label first

Before anything else — check the label. Every Corteiz garment carries washing instructions specific to its fabric composition. Corteiz produces pieces across a wide range of materials: heavyweight cotton fleece on hoodies, technical nylon on puffers, cotton canvas on cargos, and thinner jersey on their tees. Each behaves differently under heat, water, and agitation. Ignoring the care label is the single fastest way to ruin a piece you paid good money — and real effort — to own.

Pay particular attention to temperature symbols. A tub with a number inside indicates the maximum wash temperature. A crossed-out tub means hand wash only. A crossed-out triangle means no bleach. Learn these symbols once and they'll save you every time.

Wash cold
30°C max for most pieces. Cold water protects colour and fabric structure.
Turn inside out
Always. Protects graphics, embroidery, and outer surface from friction.
Gentle cycle
Use a delicate or gentle programme to reduce mechanical stress on fibres.
Mild detergent
Avoid biological detergents on dark fabrics. Use colour-safe formulas.

Washing

Machine washing: the right way

For the majority of Corteiz cotton pieces — tees, hoodies, joggers, and sweatshirts — machine washing is fine, provided you follow the rules. The golden rule is cold or cool water, never hot. High temperatures cause cotton to shrink, colours to bleed, and printed graphics to crack or peel. Corteiz is known for bold screen prints and embroidered logos — heat is their enemy.

1
Turn the garment inside out before placing it in the machine. This is non-negotiable for any piece with screen printing, embroidery, or raised graphics.
2
Set the machine to 30°C or below, on a gentle or delicate cycle. Avoid anything above 40°C unless the label specifically permits it.
3
Use a colour-safe, mild detergent. Avoid fabric softener on heavyweight fleece — it breaks down the fibres over time and reduces the fabric's structure and weight.
4
Wash similar colours together. Dark pieces — black, navy, forest green — should never be washed with lights in the first few washes especially, as dye transfer is common.
5
Remove promptly. Leaving wet garments in the drum causes mildew smell and can set creases into the fabric that are hard to remove.

Never use bleach on any Corteiz garment, even on white colourways. Bleach degrades cotton fibres rapidly and will destroy screen-printed graphics permanently.

Outerwear

Caring for puffers and technical jackets

The Corteiz Bolo puffer is one of the brand's most iconic pieces — and one of the most technically demanding to clean. Nylon outer shells, synthetic insulation, and branded embroidery all require different treatment than standard cotton. For puffers specifically, spot cleaning is almost always preferable to a full machine wash. Use a damp cloth and a tiny amount of mild detergent to address specific dirty areas rather than submerging the whole jacket.

If a full wash is necessary, check whether the jacket is rated for machine washing. If it is, use a very low spin speed, cold water, and a down-specific or technical outerwear detergent. Never wring or twist a puffer jacket — this damages the internal baffles and causes the insulation to clump unevenly, ruining both the look and the thermal performance of the jacket.

For light dirt on puffers and nylon pieces, a microfibre cloth dampened with cool water removes most surface marks without any need for a full wash.

Your Corteiz isn't just clothing — it's a limited release. Treat it like the collectible it is, and it will hold its look, its structure, and its value for years.

Drying

How to dry without damaging

The tumble dryer is the single biggest threat to Corteiz clothing after washing. High heat causes cotton to shrink — sometimes dramatically — and repeated tumble drying degrades the quality of fleece, breaks down elastane in waistbands, and causes graphics to crack and separate from the fabric. The safest rule: air dry everything.

Lay flat or hang dry in a well-ventilated space away from direct sunlight. Direct sun bleaches dark garments over time, fading black to a dull brown and navy to a muddy grey. If you must use a dryer, select the lowest heat setting possible and remove the garment while it is still slightly damp, then finish air drying. This protects fibres while still reducing drying time.

For hoodies, reshape while damp — pull the cuffs and hem straight, realign any ribbing, and ensure the hood sits flat. This prevents the distortion that occurs when heavy cotton dries twisted or bunched.

Ironing & storage

Finishing and storing your pieces correctly

For pieces that need ironing — mostly Corteiz tees and lighter cotton items — always iron inside out and use a low to medium heat setting. Never iron directly over a graphic or printed logo. Place a thin cotton cloth between the iron and the garment for an extra layer of protection. Steam settings are generally safe but avoid direct contact of the steam nozzle with embroidery.

Storage matters more than most people think. Fold hoodies and heavyweight pieces rather than hanging them — hanging heavy cotton stretches the shoulders and distorts the neckline over time. For puffers, store loosely rather than compressed. Keeping a puffer compressed in a stuff sack for extended periods causes the insulation to lose its loft, reducing warmth and changing the jacket's silhouette. Hang puffers on padded hangers in a cool, dry wardrobe.

For long-term storage, keep pieces in breathable cotton garment bags rather than plastic. Plastic traps moisture and can encourage mildew. Cedar blocks or lavender sachets help repel moths — a real concern for any wardrobe with significant cotton investment. A well-cared-for Corteiz piece doesn't just look good today. It looks good in five years, when the resale value has climbed and the cultural weight of owning it has only deepened. That's the real return on proper care.

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