Thurlow Weed wrote:
WOW!!! Rather impressive how nimbly she does it!. I got a folded T-shirt out of my dresser so I could try this. After a couple of tries (trying to find the midway down point on the shirt), I got the hang of it.

I wonder if there's a similar snappy method for packing long-sleeve button down shirts for travel.......

Thurlow
Lancaster, Ohio
Hi, all, I'm de-lurking for this one -- I actually know about this!  :-D

Many, many years ago, I was taught the "French valet" method of folding men's shirts, especially the long-sleeved ones. Sorry, it's not as snappy, but it actually takes only a little more time than the Korean way -- and, at least, it works for all kinds of shirts. These instructions sound involved and fussy, but it's really quick and simple once you've figured it out.

1-- Button at least three of the shirt's front buttons. Button the collar if it's a button-down.

2-- Lay out your shirt neatly and flat, and front-down. Imagine a line running down the center-back, from the neckline/collar to the hem.

3-- Fold one side seam toward the center of the shirt, so it lies parallel to the imaginary center-back line, almost as far as that line but not quite. You'll be dragging the sleeve along, but don't worry about that yet. DO worry about crinkles in the fabric along all folds -- smooth or tug them out, or they'll be as good as "ironed in" to your shirt, once you reach your destination. The folded edge should be a straight line parallel to the center-back "line", unless the shirt's very fitted.

4-- Straighten out the sleeve so it lies flat: now it's going in the same direction as the other sleeve and parallel to it. 5-- Now, pinch or hold down the (upper) sleeve along its center crease, just down from the shoulder seam. Then fold the sleeve so it now lies over and parallel to the side seam (where it sits after the first fold, Step 3). You'll have a fold in the upper third-or-so of the sleeve that lies at (very roughly) a 45-degree angle to the newest sleeve direction. The newly-folded sleeve will probably cover the side seam (first folded over in Step 3).

6-- Repeat Steps 3-5 in mirror-image, with the other side of the shirt. The two side seams should be almost touching each other, with the first sleeve in between.

7-- Now, fold the shirt in half on the waistline (or a little above it, parallel to it). If the shirt is very long, fold a small section up from the hem, the fold parallel to the waistline, but only 4-8 inches up from the hem. Then fold that fold up to just barely cover the top of the shirt's collar.

8-- Turn the shirt over, adjust the collar to lie as flat as possible, and you're ready to pack it.

This is also the way men's dress shirts are often still packaged in the garment industry, but for sale, they add in all those collar-stiffeners and cardboard bits that hold the shape. I always use it on my own shirts, and it works amazingly well, even on some of my things with large or asymmetrical collars, or fairly full sleeves. It can even work on business jackets, though not so reliably -- personally, I hate all the buttoning and unbuttoning involved.

Done right, this method is meant to minimize the need to iron the shirt, even if you have to wear it right out of your luggage. The creases that *are* pressed in are symmetrical, and generally vertical, so that even they look neat.

I hope this helps -- sorry the directions are so involved -- I may have over-engineered them a little. :-D

Cheers,
Beth Schoenberg
--- in beautiful downtown Kambah, Canberra (Australia!), where gorgeous warm weather has inspired the irises to bloom vigorously in spite of the continuing drought.

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