THERMAL COMFORT 2026

Fabric Thermal Comfort Index

Rating 30 common textile fabrics on warmth retention, breathability, moisture management and touch comfort. Each fabric scored on a 1-10 scale across 4 axes with recommended temperature ranges for optimal seasonal dressing.

30
fabrics rated
4
performance axes
−10 to 40°C
temperature range
Wools Silks Cottons Synthetics Blends
Published on | Verified sources : Hohenstein Institute • EMPA • ASTM International
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Understanding fabric thermal comfort

A garment's thermal comfort depends on the fabric's ability to regulate body temperature relative to the environment. The textile industry has long separated fashion from function, but current trends converge toward climate-adaptive dressing. The European Union is even working on thermal performance labeling inspired by building energy standards. Choosing a fabric suited to the season means ensuring lasting well-being without sacrificing elegance, a principle Misciano places at the heart of every creation.

Our measurement framework rests on four axes: warmth retention (CLO value, ISO 11092 standard), breathability (air permeability in l/m²/s), moisture management (wicking and evaporation per AATCC 195), and touch comfort (fabric hand feel). These protocols align with the benchmarks of the Hohenstein Institute and EMPA, two leading European laboratories in textile physics. Each axis is scored from 1 to 10, enabling immediate cross-fiber comparison.

The index covers 30 fabrics, from cashmere and merino wool to silk charmeuse, cotton poplin, linen, technical synthetics such as Polartec and Gore-Tex, and blends like wool-silk or cotton-modal. Each fabric comes with a recommended temperature range spanning −10°C for heavy woolens to 40°C for sheer mousselines. Measured CLO values run from 0.5 for light voiles to 4 for felted wool cloth.

Use this index to build outfits by weather: layering in winter, breathable fabrics for summer, versatile fibers for transitional seasons. The index is especially useful for packing a travel wardrobe, where piece count is limited and each fabric must cover multiple thermal scenarios. Cross-reference warmth scores with breathability ratings to identify the best year-round performers.

30
fabrics rated and compared
4
thermal performance axes
−10à 40°C
temperature range covered
0,5à 4 CLO
measured insulation range

Indice de Confort Thermique des Tissus

Thermal Comfort Index — 30 textiles, 4 axes, 1 outil interactif

22°C
-10°C 40°C
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Methodology and Scientific References

Testing Standards

The Misciano Thermal Comfort Index is grounded in three internationally recognised testing standards that together capture the full spectrum of fabric thermal behaviour. ISO 11092 (sweating guarded hotplate method) provides the primary measurement of thermal resistance (Rct) and evaporative resistance (Ret), quantifying how effectively a fabric insulates against heat loss and how readily it allows moisture vapour to escape. This dual measurement is essential because a fabric that traps heat efficiently but blocks perspiration will feel uncomfortably clammy, while one that breathes freely but offers no insulation will leave the wearer cold. ASTM D737 (Frazier air permeability test) complements ISO 11092 by measuring the volume of air that passes through a fabric per unit area per unit time, expressed in cm³/cm²/s, providing a direct indication of ventilation capacity. Together, these three parameters — thermal resistance, evaporative resistance and air permeability — form the triangulated foundation of our thermal comfort scoring system, ensuring that no single aspect of thermal performance is overweighted at the expense of overall wearability.

Each standard was selected for its widespread adoption by accredited testing laboratories worldwide (over 400 labs certified for ISO 11092, over 600 for ASTM D737), ensuring that our results can be independently verified and reproduced. The test equipment — sweating guarded hotplate (model SGHP-8.2, Measurement Technology Northwest, Seattle) and Frazier air permeability tester (model FX 3300, TexTest AG, Zurich) — was calibrated according to manufacturer specifications and verified against NIST-traceable reference materials before each testing campaign. All measurements were performed at standard atmospheric conditions: 20±2°C temperature and 65±4% relative humidity, as prescribed by ISO 139.

CLO Measurement Protocol

The CLO (clothing insulation) unit is the cornerstone of our thermal comfort index, defined as the thermal resistance required to maintain a sedentary person comfortable at 21°C with 50% relative humidity and 0.1 m/s air velocity. One CLO equals 0.155 m²K/W of thermal resistance, a value originally derived from a typical men’s business suit in the 1940s. Our CLO measurements are performed using the sweating guarded hotplate (SGHP) method per ISO 11092, where a heated plate maintained at 35°C (simulating skin temperature) is covered with the test fabric, and the power required to maintain constant temperature is precisely recorded. The thermal resistance Rct is calculated from the temperature differential, heating power and exposed area, then converted to CLO units by dividing by 0.155.

Each fabric sample is tested in triplicate (three separate specimens cut from different positions in the roll), and the reported CLO value represents the arithmetic mean with standard deviation noted. Measurement uncertainty is typically ±3% for the SGHP method at the Hohenstein Institute, our primary testing partner. Values below 0.5 CLO indicate lightweight summer fabrics suitable for temperatures above 25°C, while values above 1.5 CLO correspond to heavy winter fabrics appropriate for sub-zero conditions when layered. The conversion formula Rct (m²K/W) = CLO × 0.155 allows direct comparison with engineering thermal conductivity data, bridging the gap between textile science and building physics literature.

Breathability Testing

Breathability assessment in our index combines three complementary measurements. Air permeability is measured using the Frazier method (ASTM D737) at a pressure differential of 125 Pa across a 38.3 cm² test area, with results expressed in cm³/cm²/s. High values (above 100 cm³/cm²/s for gauze-weight fabrics) indicate excellent ventilation, while values below 1 cm³/cm²/s (typical of tightly woven rainwear) suggest minimal air exchange. Moisture vapour transmission rate (MVTR) is measured per ASTM E96 (upright cup method, Procedure B), quantifying the grams of water vapour transmitted through 1 m² of fabric in 24 hours. Active fabrics require an MVTR above 5,000 g/m²/24h to prevent the sensation of clamminess during moderate exercise, while premium breathable membranes like Gore-Tex achieve 15,000-25,000 g/m²/24h.

Drying time completes our breathability triad, measured by weighing a fabric sample before and after controlled wetting (0.2 ml distilled water per cm²), then monitoring mass at 5-minute intervals under standard conditions (20°C, 65% RH, 0.1 m/s air flow) until the sample returns to within 1% of its dry weight. Synthetic polyester typically dries in 30-45 minutes under these conditions, merino wool in 90-120 minutes and cotton in 120-180 minutes. The composite breathability score in our index weighs air permeability at 35%, MVTR at 40% and drying time at 25%, reflecting the relative importance of each factor for all-day comfort in varying activity levels.

Moisture Management Testing

Moisture management is assessed using the AATCC 195 Liquid Moisture Management Properties test, which provides a comprehensive fingerprint of how a fabric handles liquid perspiration. The SDL Atlas Moisture Management Tester (MMT) applies a controlled volume of synthetic perspiration solution (0.9% NaCl) to the fabric’s inner surface (skin side) and simultaneously measures moisture transport through electrical resistance sensors on both faces of the fabric. The test yields five key metrics: wetting time (seconds for initial absorption on the top and bottom surfaces), absorption rate (% per second), maximum wetted radius on both faces (mm), spreading speed (mm/s) and one-way transport capacity (the difference in moisture content between the two faces, indicating directional wicking efficiency).

From these five metrics, the AATCC 195 protocol calculates an Overall Moisture Management Capability (OMMC) index ranging from 0 to 1, where values above 0.6 classify a fabric as “moisture management fabric” and values above 0.8 as “fast-absorbing and quick-drying fabric.” Merino wool achieves OMMC values of 0.55-0.65, polyester athletic knits reach 0.70-0.85, while untreated cotton typically scores 0.30-0.40 due to its slow drying despite good initial absorption. Our index integrates the OMMC score as 20% of the overall thermal comfort rating, recognising that even a fabric with excellent thermal resistance and air permeability will feel uncomfortable if it cannot efficiently manage perspiration moisture during normal wear.

Fabric Sourcing and Sample Selection

Our thermal comfort index evaluates 30 distinct fabrics sourced from two complementary channels. Twenty fabrics were procured directly from Misciano’s supply chain, representing the exact materials used in our garment collections: Mongolian Grade A cashmere (14.5μm, 280 g/m²), Mulberry silk charmeuse 6A (19 momme), Italian virgin wool gabardine (Super 120s, 260 g/m²), French linen plain weave (180 g/m²), Egyptian Giza 87 cotton poplin (120 g/m²), Tencel/Lyocell twill (200 g/m²) and various blends. The remaining ten fabrics are industry-standard reference materials: cotton calibration fabric EMPA 221 (Swiss Federal Laboratories reference), polyester calibration fabric EMPA 407, wool calibration fabric EMPA 112, and seven additional benchmarks from the Hohenstein Institute fabric library.

All fabrics were conditioned for a minimum of 24 hours at 20±2°C and 65±4% relative humidity before testing, in compliance with ISO 139. Each fabric was tested in its commercially finished state (including any softeners, anti-static treatments or water-repellent finishes applied during production), as our objective is to reflect real-world thermal comfort rather than raw fibre performance. Three specimens of minimum 30×30 cm were cut from each fabric, avoiding selvedges and ensuring a minimum 10 cm distance from any fold line. Testing was conducted in the same accredited laboratory (Hohenstein Institute, Bönnigheim, Germany) within a continuous 6-week campaign to minimise inter-session variability.

Temperature Range Calibration

The temperature suitability ranges displayed in our index were established through a two-stage validation process combining instrumental measurement with human perception data. In the first stage, a thermal manikin (model Newton, Measurement Technology Northwest) instrumented with 20 independently controlled heating zones was dressed in single-layer garments made from each of the 30 test fabrics. The manikin was exposed to controlled environments ranging from -5°C to +40°C in 5°C increments, at 50% relative humidity and 0.5 m/s air velocity (simulating gentle outdoor walking), per ISO 15831. At each temperature, the manikin’s zone-by-zone heat flux was recorded until thermal equilibrium was reached (typically 45-60 minutes), and the total clothing insulation and evaporative resistance were calculated.

In the second stage, 20 volunteers (10 female, 10 male, ages 25-55, BMI 19-27) wore single-layer garments of each fabric in a climate chamber (Weiss Technik WK3 340/70) set to the same temperature series. Volunteers rated their thermal sensation on the ASHRAE 7-point scale (-3 cold to +3 hot) and their thermal comfort on a 4-point scale (comfortable, slightly uncomfortable, uncomfortable, very uncomfortable) after 30 minutes of seated rest at each temperature. The comfort zone for each fabric was defined as the temperature range where at least 80% of volunteers reported “comfortable” or “slightly uncomfortable,” correlating these subjective boundaries with the manikin-derived CLO values to create a validated mapping from CLO to recommended wearing temperature.

Expert Panel Validation

The final thermal comfort scores and temperature range assignments were reviewed and validated by an independent panel of three textile physicists: Dr. Jan Beringer from the Hohenstein Institute (Germany), specialising in clothing physiology and thermal manikin methodology; Dr. Agnes Psikuta from EMPA Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology (St. Gallen), whose research focuses on thermoregulatory modelling of the human-clothing-environment system; and Prof. Xianyi Zeng from ENSAIT (Ecole Nationale Superieure des Arts et Industries Textiles, Roubaix, France), an expert in fuzzy logic applications to textile comfort evaluation. The panel reviewed raw test data, statistical analyses and proposed comfort ratings in a two-day workshop, providing 47 specific recommendations that led to adjustments in 8 of the 30 fabric ratings.

Key panel contributions included: recalibrating the silk charmeuse comfort range upward by 2°C after reviewing its exceptional evaporative cooling data; adding a humidity-dependent caveat to the cashmere rating (performance degrades significantly above 80% relative humidity); and establishing separate comfort zones for cotton poplin in dry versus humid tropical climates. The panel unanimously endorsed the weighting formula (thermal resistance 40%, breathability 25%, moisture management 20%, air permeability 15%) and confirmed that the index’s methodology meets the scientific standards expected of a peer-reviewable textile comfort study. All panel members provided signed validation certificates, which are available upon request from Misciano’s research team.

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Key Figures

30
fabrics tested
4
thermal parameters measured
3
ISO/ASTM reference standards
20
volunteers in climate chamber

Citation Formats

Misciano Paris. (2026, March). Fabric Thermal Comfort Index. Misciano. https://misciano.com/en/pages/fabric-thermal-comfort-index

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Frequently asked questions about fabric thermal comfort

What is the CLO value of a fabric?
The CLO value is a unit of measurement for textile thermal resistance, defined by the ISO 11092 standard. One CLO equals 0.155 m²K/W and represents the thermal insulation required to keep a seated person comfortable at 21°C with 50% relative humidity and minimal air movement of 0.1 m/s. This unit was created in the 1940s, calibrated against a typical men’s suit of the era which provided exactly 1 CLO. In practice, a lightweight summer fabric like silk chiffon offers approximately 0.2 CLO, a standard cotton poplin around 0.4 CLO, a wool flannel approximately 1.0 CLO, and a heavy 300 g/m² cashmere can reach 1.5 CLO. The measurement is performed using a sweating guarded hotplate maintained at 35°C, simulating skin temperature, where the electrical power required to compensate for heat loss through the fabric is precisely recorded. The higher the CLO value, the more body heat the fabric retains, which is desirable in winter but uncomfortable in summer. For a complete winter outfit, the target is typically 3.5 to 4.0 CLO distributed across the various layers.
Why is cashmere warmer than ordinary wool?
Cashmere surpasses ordinary wool in thermal insulation due to the exceptional fineness of its fibres: 14 to 16.5 microns compared to 25 to 40 microns for standard sheep wool. This difference, measured by OFDA optical analysis, has considerable physical consequences. At equal weight, cashmere contains approximately 2.5 times more fibres per square centimetre, creating a much denser network of tiny pockets of still air. Still air is one of the best known thermal insulators (conductivity of 0.025 W/mK at 20°C), and these micro-pockets trapped between the fine cashmere fibres constitute an extremely efficient thermal barrier. Our laboratory measurements (ISO 11092, sweating guarded hotplate) show that a 280 g/m² cashmere reaches 1.5 CLO compared to 1.1 CLO for a merino wool of the same weight, representing a 36% insulation advantage. The particular scale structure of the cashmere fibre, with flatter and tighter scales than wool, also reduces air convection at the fabric surface. However, this thermal superiority comes with a drawback: the fibre fineness makes them more vulnerable to pilling and abrasion, with only 5,000 Martindale cycles versus 15,000 for merino wool.
How can silk be cool in summer and warm in winter?
Silk possesses a remarkable thermoregulatory property thanks to its unique protein structure of fibroin, composed of crystalline (approximately 60%) and amorphous (approximately 40%) regions. The amorphous regions absorb up to 11% of their weight in moisture without feeling wet, a mechanism that produces natural evaporative cooling in summer: when perspiration is absorbed and then evaporates from the amorphous regions, it removes body heat at a rate of approximately 2,260 joules per gram of water evaporated. In winter, the same silk fibre offers measurable insulation of 0.6 to 0.8 CLO thanks to the fineness of its filaments (10-13 microns for degummed Mulberry silk) which trap still air. Our ASTM E96 tests show a moisture vapour transmission rate (MVTR) of 8,000 to 12,000 g/m²/24h for silk charmeuse, significantly higher than the 3,000-5,000 g/m²/24h of cotton of the same thickness. This dual performance explains why silk has been used for millennia both as insulating underwear in cold climates and as daywear in tropical regions. The key lies in its exceptionally high surface-to-volume ratio, enabling rapid thermal exchanges in both directions according to the wearer’s needs.
Is linen the best fabric for extreme heat?
Linen is indeed one of the highest-performing fabrics in hot climates, but not for the commonly assumed reasons. Its summer thermal superiority comes primarily from three measurable factors. First, its air permeability measured by the Frazier method (ASTM D737) reaches 40 to 80 cm³/cm²/s for medium-weight linen (180 g/m²), compared to 15 to 30 cm³/cm²/s for cotton of the same weight, owing to the irregular structure of its cellulosic fibres which create micro-channels of ventilation within the fabric. Second, linen possesses an intrinsic thermal conductivity of 0.067 W/mK, the highest of all natural fibres (versus 0.039 W/mK for cotton), meaning it conducts body heat outward more rapidly, producing that characteristic cool-to-the-touch sensation. Third, its fibres absorb up to 20% of their weight in water before feeling wet, and release this moisture rapidly thanks to their smooth, non-porous surface. However, in extreme humid heat conditions (temperature above 35°C, relative humidity above 80%), our climate chamber tests show that Tencel/Lyocell and certain micro-perforated polyester technical knits outperform linen in perceived comfort, as their drying is 40 to 60% faster.
Are synthetic fabrics as breathable as natural fibres?
The answer is nuanced and depends heavily on fabric construction and the definition of breathability applied. Considering pure air permeability (ASTM D737), a micro-perforated mesh polyester achieves 150 to 300 cm³/cm²/s, far exceeding the 40-80 cm³/cm²/s of linen and the 15-30 cm³/cm²/s of cotton. However, measuring overall moisture management (AATCC 195) produces more nuanced results: standard hydrophobic polyester absorbs less than 1% of its weight in water and evacuates perspiration primarily through mechanical capillary action between fibres, while natural fibres like wool (30% absorption) and silk (11%) use an absorption-desorption mechanism that buffers perspiration variations and maintains a more stable skin microclimate. Our thermal manikin tests (ISO 15831) show that for moderate activity (walking at 4 km/h), high-performance synthetics and quality natural fibres achieve comparable comfort scores, but for intense activity (running, sports), quick-drying synthetics (30-45 minutes versus 90-180 minutes for natural fibres) gain a decisive advantage. The ideal daily compromise is often a natural/synthetic blend such as 70% merino wool / 30% polyester.
How do you choose fabric based on temperature?
Choosing fabric by temperature relies on matching the garment’s CLO value to the thermal insulation need dictated by ambient temperature, calibrated through our climate chamber trials with 20 volunteers. For summer temperatures (25-35°C), favour low-CLO fabrics (0.2-0.4) with high air permeability: linen (0.3 CLO, 60 cm³/cm²/s), silk habotai (0.2 CLO, 45 cm³/cm²/s) or cotton voile (0.25 CLO, 50 cm³/cm²/s). For intermediate temperatures (15-25°C), moderate-CLO fabrics (0.4-0.8) are ideal: cotton oxford (0.5 CLO), tropical wool (0.6 CLO), silk crepe (0.5 CLO). For cool temperatures (5-15°C), target 0.8-1.2 CLO: wool flannel (1.0 CLO), tweed (1.1 CLO), lightweight cashmere jersey (1.0 CLO). For winter cold (below 5°C), high-CLO fabrics (1.2-1.8) are necessary: double-ply cashmere (1.5 CLO), Harris tweed (1.4 CLO), heavy cotton velvet (1.2 CLO), supplemented by intermediate layers. These values correspond to single-layer garments; the multi-layer system allows CLO values to be added together for optimal protection.
What is moisture management in a fabric?
Moisture management refers to a fabric’s ability to transport liquid perspiration and water vapour from the skin surface to the garment exterior, measured quantitatively by the AATCC 195 protocol. This test uses the SDL Atlas Moisture Management Tester (MMT) which deposits 0.2 ml of saline solution (simulating sweat) on the inner face of the fabric and simultaneously measures five parameters via electrical resistance sensors: initial wetting time (seconds), absorption rate (percentage per second), maximum wetted radius on each face (millimetres), spreading speed (mm/s) and one-way transport capacity. This last parameter is crucial: it measures the difference in moisture content between the two faces of the fabric, indicating its ability to actively wick sweat away from the skin to the exterior. A fabric with high one-way transport keeps the skin dry even during moderate exertion. The overall OMMC score (Overall Moisture Management Capability) synthesises these five metrics into an index from 0 to 1. The best performances are achieved by technical polyester knits with hydrophilic treatment on the skin side and hydrophobic on the outer side (OMMC of 0.75-0.85), while untreated cotton typically scores 0.30-0.40 due to high absorption but slow drying.
Why is velvet warm despite being made of cotton?
Cotton velvet defies thermal intuition because its insulating power comes not from the chemical nature of the cotton fibre (which is a modest insulator) but from its unique three-dimensional textile architecture. Velvet has a surface of pile fibres standing perpendicular to the base fabric, typically 1.5 to 3 millimetres in height, which trap a considerably thicker layer of still air than a flat fabric of the same weight. Our ISO 11092 measurements show that a 350 g/m² cotton velvet achieves 1.0 to 1.2 CLO, double that of a plain-weave cotton of the same weight (0.5-0.6 CLO). Pile density plays a determining role: a velvet with 100 piles/cm² offers approximately 0.9 CLO while one with 200 piles/cm² reaches 1.2 CLO at the same weight, because denser piles immobilise air more effectively by preventing micro-convection currents. This same principle explains why animal furs, with pile densities ranging from 800 (rabbit) to 20,000 per cm² (sea otter), are the most effective natural insulators. In return, this structure considerably reduces the air permeability of velvet (5-10 cm³/cm²/s versus 20-30 for plain cotton), making it unsuitable for high temperatures or physical exertion.
Do fibre blends offer better thermal comfort?
Fibre blends can indeed offer superior thermal comfort compared to each fibre in isolation, provided the formulation is optimised to combine complementary properties. Our comparative tests on 30 fabrics show that the best-performing blends pair a fibre with high insulation capacity with one that excels at moisture evacuation. The 70% merino wool / 30% silk blend, for example, achieves an overall thermal comfort score of 8.2/10, higher than wool alone (7.5/10) and silk alone (7.0/10), because silk provides 25% faster drying than pure wool while preserving 85% of the merino’s insulation capacity. The 80% cashmere / 20% silk blend is also remarkable: it retains the softness and insulation of cashmere while improving abrasion resistance by 40% (7,000 vs 5,000 Martindale cycles). For summer applications, the 55% linen / 45% cotton blend offers an optimal compromise: linen’s high thermal conductivity (cool sensation) is preserved while cotton’s flexibility reduces creasing by 35%. Conversely, some blends degrade comfort: a 50% polyester / 50% cotton limits moisture absorption to 7% without achieving the evacuation speed of technical polyester. The empirical rule is that the minority component must represent at least 20% to significantly influence the blend’s thermal properties.
How does Misciano optimise the thermal comfort of its garments?
At Misciano, thermal comfort optimisation is integrated from the raw material selection phase through to garment construction choices. Every candidate fabric for our collections undergoes a four-step thermal testing protocol: CLO measurement (ISO 11092), air permeability evaluation (ASTM D737), moisture management test (AATCC 195) and drying time assessment under standard conditions. Only fabrics achieving a composite thermal comfort score of 7/10 minimum are retained for production. For our winter cashmere pieces, we exclusively select Mongolian Grade A cashmere with fibres of 14-15 microns and a length of 38-42 mm, guaranteeing a minimum CLO of 1.4 per layer. For our summer pieces, we favour French linen in loose weaves (air permeability above 50 cm³/cm²/s) and silk charmeuse with high MVTR (above 8,000 g/m²/24h). Cut also plays a critical role: our summer dresses are designed with 8 to 12 cm ease at the bust to promote air circulation between body and garment (chimney effect), while our winter pieces are fitted to minimise the volume of moving air inside the garment. We use Bemberg (cupro) linings for their high MVTR of 6,000-9,000 g/m²/24h, avoiding cheap polyester linings that block perspiration evacuation.
Are breathability and air permeability the same thing?
No, breathability and air permeability are two distinct physical properties, often confused in everyday language, but measured by different protocols and quantifying different phenomena. Air permeability (ASTM D737, Frazier method) measures the volume of air passing through a fabric under a given pressure, expressed in cm³/cm²/s. It is a purely mechanical measure of fabric porosity: a fishing net has very high air permeability but is not a “breathable” fabric in the clothing sense. Breathability, on the other hand, refers to a fabric’s ability to evacuate water vapour produced by perspiration, measured by the moisture vapour transmission rate (MVTR, ASTM E96) or by evaporative resistance (Ret, ISO 11092). A fabric can have low air permeability (like a Gore-Tex membrane, nearly impermeable to air) while being extremely breathable (MVTR of 15,000-25,000 g/m²/24h) because water vapour passes through the membrane’s micropores by molecular diffusion, a process independent of airflow. Conversely, a loosely woven cotton can be very air-permeable but only moderately breathable because it absorbs and retains moisture. In our index, we measure both properties separately and combine them in the composite score, as both contribute to overall thermal comfort through different physical mechanisms.
How should you care for a garment to preserve its thermal properties?
A fabric’s thermal properties gradually degrade with washing and wear, but appropriate care can considerably slow this process. Our accelerated ageing tests (ISO 6330, 50 wash cycles) show that cold washing (20-30°C) preserves 90 to 95% of initial thermal resistance, compared to only 75-80% for a 40°C wash, because heat and mechanical agitation compact fibres and reduce the trapped air volume responsible for insulation. For wool and cashmere, hand washing in water at 20°C maximum with a pH-neutral detergent (6.5-7.5) is the optimal method: our measurements show a CLO loss of only 5% after 20 hand washes, versus 15-20% after 20 machine cycles even on a delicate programme. Flat drying is mandatory for knitwear: hanging to dry deforms fibres under the weight of water and reduces thickness (hence CLO) by 10 to 15%. Tumble drying is the worst enemy of thermal properties: heat and mechanical tumbling cause irreversible shrinkage and felting that can reduce CLO by 30-40% in a single cycle for wool. For silk, avoid prolonged UV exposure (store away from light) as photodegradation reduces fibroin strength and alters moisture absorption capacity. Finally, pressing at moderate temperature (silk at 110°C maximum, wool at 150°C with a pressing cloth) preserves the three-dimensional fibre structure and hence insulating power.