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WesternWilson 03-17-2026 07:54 AM

Washing Machine with Accessible Lint Filter: Rag Quilts
 
I love making flannel rag quilts, but my fancy new washing machine does NOT have an accessible lint filter.

Can anyone recommend a washing machine model...older is fine...that works well for washing rag quilts, where you can clean out the lint filter as it plugs up in those first washings, where the ragged fibres all wash out of the quilt?

Make and model number would help me in my search.

Many thanks!

mkc 03-17-2026 08:03 AM

You might try asking on r/Appliances

I did a quick Google search, but it sounds like most of these newer machines with "removable" lint traps require you to remove the front panel of the machine.

QuiltE 03-17-2026 08:06 AM

I'm confused ... as I did not know that washing machines had lint filters.
Though it makes sense ... especially under the conditions of ragged quilts.

So, my only suggestion would be to check before you buy, whether it be an old model or brand spanking new!

As for lint filters in dryers ... they certainly are variable as to their size and abilities.

Good Luck!

JENNR8R 03-17-2026 09:02 AM

I would wash rag quilts at the laundrymat.

WesternWilson 03-17-2026 10:12 AM

I am fine removing the front panel, that is how I cleaned the pre-pump lint filter in all my previous washing machines.

New washers don't have accessible or any pre-pump lint filter, they depend on the drum holes serving that function, but for rag quilts, the fibres get through those holes and clog the pump! Thank heaven my machine was still on warranty when I learned that.

So. I want to buy an older model that has a lint filter I can clean myself. The washer gets a ton of lint in it for the first rag quilt wash or two and I don't feel good about leaving a laundromat with that mess, besides the fact the nearest laundromat is about a half hour drive away!

mkc 03-17-2026 11:59 AM

Could you put it in the dryer on "air fluff" (tumbling with no heat) for a bit first and let the dryer lint filter catch a lot first?

WesternWilson 03-17-2026 12:05 PM

I don't think the dryer would get much of the fluff out of the newly made rag quilt. It seems the bulk really comes from the agitation in the water of the washing machine.

Onebyone 03-17-2026 01:21 PM

Have you tried power washing, with only water, the quilt outside on a clothesline then brushing the rags with a chenille brush? Then put in washing machine. It makes amazing rags, looks like chenille. There is a well-known quilter who uses a grass trimmer to rag his quilts. Maybe Ricky Tims or John Flynn. I can't remember.

WesternWilson 03-17-2026 03:52 PM

one by one that sounds like a whole lotta work!

b.zang 03-18-2026 02:21 PM

I took my rag quilts to the laundromat and had to alert the attendant to clean the machine after I used it. Then, the lint filter on the dryer needed to be changed before the quilt was fully dry. I think I'd try making it wet and then tossing it into the dryer before washing. There seemed to be a lot of lint in the dryer.


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