The reason
cleaners charge more for women’s blouses than men’s business shirts is because
they are passing along their increased cost of production to their customers.
Depending on the cleaner’s equipment, it costs them between three and four
times the labor expense to properly “finish” a women’s blouse compared to
a men’s shirt. Here’s why…
The biggest
production cost for a cleaner is their labor expense, the money they pay their
employees. Most of their labor goes into the “finishing” of a garment.
Finishing is a combination of machine pressing and
hand ironing. Most garments require a combination of machine pressing and
hand ironing to achieve the desired finish. Many cleaners have special
“assembly line style” machines that can finish the typical men’s
business shirts without any hand ironing. These machines greatly reduce
the time and labor needed to finish a shirt compared to a women’s
blouse which sometimes requires as much as 100% hand ironing to
achieve the proper finish. Depending on their equipment and the skill of the
presser, most cleaners can finish three to four men’s business shirts
in the same time it takes to finish one women’s blouse.
You may be
thinking, why not make similar machines for finishing women’s blouses? Well,
I’m sure they would if they could. The problem is that women’s blouses come in
an extremely wide variety and combination of
different patterns, fabric types, trims and ornamentation. Plus,
these variations can change dramatically from season to season with
the latest changes in fashion. This prevents the machine
manufacturers from developing presses that will fit the majority of
women’s blouses. Where as men’s shirts have basically looked exactly the
same for more than 100 years and they’re almost always made of 100% cotton
or a cotton/poly blend. This stability in style has enabled the machine
manufacturers to develop shirt presses that will fit the majority of men’s
business shirts. The classic men’s business shirt is called a Pin Point Oxford
and has the common features in the diagram below…
Here is an
educational video on how to press shirts, courtesy of YouTube and
produced by The
DryCleaning & Laundry Institute. It shows these machines in
operation and the proper way to use them. Sorry, I couldn’t find a video
showing how to hand finish a women’s blouse, but it is very similar to the way
you would do hand ironing at home.


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