# How to Care for Cushion Covers and Throws

**By Megafurniture Admin** · 2026-06-02

![Neutral cushion covers and a green knitted throw styled on a beige sofa beside a window](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/washable-cushion-covers-and-throws-living-room.jpg?v=1780384371)

Most cushion covers and throws last years longer with two habits: washing in cool water on a gentle cycle, and air-drying flat or over a rail rather than tumble-drying. Check the care label first, as fibre type determines the specifics. Delicate weaves such as linen and textured knits need a little more attention; performance fabrics and polyester blends tolerate a more direct approach. The steps below walk through each fabric type clearly, so you know exactly what you are dealing with.

## What to Know Before You Begin

The fabric composition of a cushion cover or throw determines every care decision that follows. A tightly woven performance polyester and a loosely knitted cotton throw are not washed the same way, and treating them identically is where most of the damage happens. Before anything else, find the care label, usually sewn into a seam or along the inner edge of a cover, and read it in full.

A few material facts that matter here. Linen and cotton are natural fibres that breathe well in Singapore's humid climate, but both are prone to shrinking in hot water and creasing if dried bunched up in a machine drum. Polyester and microfibre blends resist moisture more readily and hold their shape through machine washing, which is part of what makes them a practical choice in a first home. Knitted throws, whether cotton, acrylic, or a blend, need the gentlest handling of all: the weave can distort under tension, particularly when wet.

One thing nobody tells you clearly at the point of purchase: the care label on a cushion cover refers to the cover alone, not the inner cushion or bolster insert. Wash them separately, always. The insert may have a different care requirement entirely, and wetting it improperly can lead to clumping fill or mould in Singapore's humidity.

You will need the following before starting:

-   A mild, pH-neutral laundry detergent
-   A mesh laundry bag for smaller or delicate covers
-   A clean towel for pressing excess water from hand-washed items
-   Access to a drying rail or a flat drying surface in a well-ventilated spot
-   A cool iron or steamer for linen and cotton covers that crease heavily

## Step 1: Sort by Fabric Type and Colour

![Folded throws, cushion cover, and fabric brush arranged for soft furnishing care](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/folded-cushion-covers-and-throws-care-routine.jpg?v=1780384416)

Group your cushion covers and throws by material first, then by colour. Deep-dyed covers, particularly in navy, forest green, or terracotta, can transfer colour during the first few washes. Wash them with similar tones until they have been laundered two or three times and the dye has settled. This is especially relevant with linen and cotton, which tend to release more dye in early washes than synthetic blends do.

If you have a mix of delicate knitted throws and robust polyester covers, do not wash them together. The agitation needed to clean one can distort the other. Separate loads take a little longer, but the results are consistently better.

## Step 2: Pre-Treat Any Stains

A small amount of mild detergent worked gently into a stain with a soft cloth before washing is more effective than a full wash at a higher temperature. Higher heat does not necessarily clean better, and on natural fibres it typically causes shrinkage. For oil-based stains, a very small amount of dish soap applied before washing lifts the grease without requiring hot water.

Do not rub aggressively. Work the detergent in with small circular motions from the outer edge of the stain inward, then leave it for five to ten minutes before washing. This approach holds the fabric's weave intact and gives the detergent time to break down the stain properly.

For throws with a textured or tasselled edge, keep pre-treatment away from the edging and apply it to the main body of the throw only. Tassels and fringing are prone to tangling when wet and should not be scrubbed directly.

## Step 3: Choose the Right Wash Method

### Machine-Washable Covers and Throws

Performance fabric covers, polyester blends, and most cotton covers without a delicate construction can go into the machine on a gentle or delicate cycle at 30°C. Use a small amount of mild detergent, roughly half the quantity you would use for a full load of everyday laundry. Overloading the drum compresses the fabric and prevents it from rinsing cleanly.

Place cushion covers inside a mesh laundry bag. The bag reduces friction against the zip and against other items in the drum, which is where pilling tends to begin. Turn covers inside out before placing them in the bag for an added layer of protection on the face side of the fabric.

Skip the spin cycle above 800 rpm for any throw with significant weight or texture. A fast spin can pull the weave and distort the shape, particularly at the corners, which are the first areas to show stress.

### Hand-Washing Delicate Knits and Loosely Woven Throws

Fill a basin with cool water and a small amount of detergent formulated for delicates or wool. Submerge the throw fully, press it gently under the water, and let it soak for ten minutes. Do not wring, twist, or lift the throw by one end when it is wet, as the weight of the water puts the weave under significant tension.

Drain the basin, refill with clean cool water, and press the throw through the rinse water until the detergent is gone. Repeat once if needed. Then lay the throw flat on a clean, dry towel, roll the towel around it, and press firmly along the length to absorb the excess water. This removes moisture without pulling the shape.

### Dry-Clean-Only Items

Some textured or structured throws, particularly those with a high wool content or an embellished surface, carry a dry-clean-only label. Follow it. The instruction is there because the fibre structure or construction cannot tolerate water immersion without distorting. This is the one instance where attempting to save the dry-cleaning cost can result in a throw that has lost its shape entirely.

## Step 4: Dry Correctly

Air-drying in a well-ventilated space is the right approach for almost every cushion cover and throw. In Singapore's climate, a covered outdoor area or a room with a standing fan circulating air will dry most items within a few hours without the heat damage that a tumble dryer introduces.

Lay knitted throws flat on a clean surface or a drying rack rather than hanging them. A wet knitted throw hung over a rail will stretch under its own weight, and the distortion at the shoulders of the fold becomes permanent once dry. Flat-drying preserves the dimensions.

Cotton and linen covers can be hung over a rail while still slightly damp, which reduces creasing. Remove them when just dry rather than bone-dry, as over-drying linen in particular makes it stiff and prone to harsh creases that are difficult to press out.

On a Sunday morning before the rest of the household wakes, there is something particularly satisfying about placing freshly washed covers back on the cushions and resetting the sofa. It takes ten minutes and the room reads as composed again.

## Step 5: Press and Finish

Linen covers almost always benefit from a cool iron while still slightly damp. The moisture in the fabric allows the iron to release the crease without excessive heat. A steam setting on a cool-to-medium iron is the most effective approach: hold the iron just above the surface rather than pressing directly onto a textured or embroidered cover.

For throws, ironing is rarely necessary and often undesirable, particularly for textured knits. A gentle shake and a flat fold is enough. If a cotton throw has come out of the wash with heavy creasing, a steamer held thirty centimetres above the surface will relax the fibres without flattening the texture.

This is the step most first-home buyers skip, and the difference in how a room reads is more significant than it sounds. A well-pressed linen cover and a neatly folded throw on the armchair reflect the cura dei dettagli — care for details — that separates a considered room from an assembled one.

## Step 6: Store Seasonal Throws Properly

Singapore's year-round warmth means throws are often rotational rather than seasonal, but if you are putting one aside for several months, wash and dry it completely before storing. Any residual moisture or body oils left in the fibre can set during storage and attract mildew in a humid environment.

Store folded in a breathable cotton bag or a pillowcase rather than a sealed plastic container. Natural fibres need air circulation to stay fresh. A cedar ball or a small sachet of dried lavender in the bag discourages insects without the chemical residue that mothballs leave behind.

## Common Mistakes to Avoid

### Washing at the Wrong Temperature

Hot water shrinks natural fibres and sets protein-based stains such as sweat and food residue permanently into the fabric. Cool or lukewarm water, 30°C or below, cleans effectively without the risk. If you are uncertain, cool water is always the safer choice.

### Tumble-Drying on High Heat

A high-heat tumble dryer cycle damages most cushion covers and throws. It shrinks natural fibres, pills synthetic blends, and over time weakens the weave structure. Air-drying takes longer. It is consistently the better result. Always.

### Using Too Much Detergent

Excess detergent does not rinse out fully in a single wash cycle, and the residue left in the fabric attracts dust and accelerates the return of staining. Half the recommended dose is usually sufficient for soft furnishings, which are not carrying the same soil load as everyday clothing.

### Ignoring Zip and Fastener Care

A zip left undone in the wash can snag the cover itself or damage adjacent items in the drum. Close all zips and fasten all press-studs before washing. Conversely, turn covers inside out after closing the zip so the face fabric faces inward and the zip teeth face outward, reducing abrasion on the patterned or textured surface.

### Washing the Insert with the Cover

As noted earlier, this is the most common mistake. The insert, whether down, hollow-fibre, or foam, almost always has different care requirements from the cover. A foam insert that is submerged in water and not dried completely in Singapore's humidity becomes a mould risk within a day or two. Remove the insert, set it aside, and deal with it separately according to its own label.

## When to Seek Advice or Visit the Showroom

![Clean cushion covers and a throw styled on a sectional sofa in a bright Singapore apartment](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/air-dried-throws-and-cushion-covers-singapore-home.jpg?v=1780384445)

A dry-clean-only throw that has been washed in error, a cover with a shrinkage distortion that no amount of stretching while damp will correct, or a fill insert that has clumped beyond recovery: these are situations where the piece may need professional assessment. A good dry cleaner with experience in soft furnishings can sometimes restore a distorted piece if you bring it in promptly, before the fibres have fully dried and set in the wrong position.

If you are at the point of replacing rather than restoring, the Esteller showroom at 604 Sembawang Road is worth a visit. The design team can help you identify covers and throws suited to your household's actual usage, whether that means a performance fabric that tolerates weekly machine washing or a textured linen that earns its place as a considered accent piece laundered with more care. Fresh pieces arrive through the year, so there is often something new to consider.

We have seen first-home buyers invest in throws they genuinely love but wash in ways that shorten their life considerably. The guidance above resolves most of that, but if questions remain, the team is also reachable at +65 6348 3144 or hello@esteller.sg.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### Can I put cushion covers in the dryer?

Many cushion covers tolerate a low-heat or air-only dryer cycle, but this depends entirely on the fabric. Linen and cotton covers will shrink at high heat. Performance fabric and polyester blends are more tolerant. The care label is the definitive reference. When in doubt, air-dry on a rail while slightly damp and the cover will hold its shape reliably.

### How often should I wash cushion covers?

In a Singapore home, every four to six weeks is a reasonable cadence for covers that are in daily use. Covers in a room with less foot traffic, or those used only as accent pieces, can go longer between washes. If a cover is on a sofa where people eat or where pets rest, fortnightly washing is practical. The aim is freshness without over-laundering, as repeated washing does accumulate wear on any fabric over time.

### How do I remove a musty smell from a throw?

A musty smell is almost always the result of the throw not drying fully before being put away or replaced. Wash it again in cool water with a tablespoon of white vinegar added to the rinse cycle, not the wash cycle, as vinegar can affect some detergents. Then dry it completely in a well-ventilated space before using it again. If the smell persists after two washes, the throw may have mould in the fibre structure and a professional clean is the appropriate next step.

### Can I wash a knitted throw in the machine?

Many knitted throws can go on a machine's delicate or wool cycle at 30°C, provided the care label permits it. Use a mesh bag, the minimum effective amount of detergent, and a slow spin. The risk with machine-washing knits is distortion under agitation and weight when wet. If the throw is loosely knitted, hand-washing and flat-drying is the more reliable method and takes only a little more time.

### What is the best way to freshen a throw between washes?

Hang the throw outside in a shaded, well-ventilated spot for an hour or two. Fresh air removes light odours more effectively than many people expect, without any washing at all. A fabric refresher spray applied lightly and allowed to dry completely is a reasonable alternative when hanging outside is not possible. Avoid applying refresher spray directly onto a pile or textured weave at close range, as it can leave a residue mark on some fabrics.

## The Right Care Holds the Right Piece

A throw or cushion cover bought with care deserves the same in its keeping. The right wash temperature, the right drying method, and a small amount of attention at each stage extend the life of soft furnishings in ways that have a genuine effect on how a room holds its character over years rather than seasons.

Explore the full range at the [throws and cushions collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/throws-cushions), where current pieces are listed with material specifications. The [pillows and bolsters collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/pillows-bolsters) covers the inserts that sit beneath the covers, each with its own care guidance. Every piece carries Esteller's three-year warranty, and free delivery applies on orders above SGD 500. The 4.8 rating across 96 Google reviews reflects how these pieces have settled into actual homes.

The Esteller showroom is open daily from 10am to 10pm at 604 Sembawang Road, #01-18 Sembawang Shopping Centre. The design team can also be reached at +65 6348 3144 or [hello@esteller.sg](mailto:hello@esteller.sg) to plan a visit.

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> Source: [Esteller Furniture](https://esteller.sg/blogs/articles/how-to-care-for-cushion-covers-and-throws)
