<HTML><FONT FACE=arial,helvetica><FONT SIZE=2>Back around 1968, my Nana made pillows for her grandchildren out of a couple
<BR>of old featherbeds that were forever old. These featherbeds had belonged to
<BR>she and her sister when they were kids, and you can imagine how clean they
<BR>were not. She dug them out of whatever black hole she had been storing them
<BR>in for half a century, tore the featherbeds apart and put the feathers into
<BR>pillowcases. Then she sewed the pillowcases shut and took them to the Wishy
<BR>Washy, where she washed them and dried them, since of course she did not have
<BR>a washer and drier at her home. She put a pair of her sneakers in the dryer
<BR>cycle with them to fluff the feathers, then took them home when dry, took
<BR>them apart and put the now clean feathers into the waiting pillow ticking
<BR>covers that she had made for them. She was in her late sixties when she did
<BR>this. And oh yeah, she did not have a car, and had to take the bus to and
<BR>from the Wishy Washy. She lived in a very hilly part of Asheville <isn't it
<BR>ALL hilly over there?> and had to walk a good bit from her house to the bus.
<BR>I used my pillow all my childhood, crying into it, snuggling into it, beating
<BR>it, putting it through all of the vagaries of youth. Whenever it got a bit
<BR>fusty, I would wash it in the machine and then put it in the dryer with a
<BR>pair of sneakers, just like Nana told me to.
<BR>
<BR>I can't guarantee that this is the best way to do it, but it always worked
<BR>for me. Part of what you need to consider is what type of fabric the
<BR>comforter is made of. It may not be washable and you may have to have it
<BR>professionally dry cleaned. Ugh.
<BR>
<BR>Good Luck
<BR>
<BR>Jane</FONT></HTML>