How to keep home textiles clean and fresh for as long as possible?
Ventilate the room regularly
Bringing fresh air into the room is the easiest way to get rid of unpleasant odors and refresh stale air. What is important, the air circulation will not allow the unpleasant smell to linger and will make it difficult for the smell to eat into the textiles. From time to time it is necessary to ventilate your bedding: pillows, mattresses and blankets. Opening windows can also help you stay healthy! Inviting airflow into your space brings more "good" bacteria inside, reducing the concentration of pathogens that can potentially make you sick.
Use a lint roller
This is not an obligatory step in cleaning, but if you want your home to be "clean", for example, before the arrival of guests, then remember this trick. Even the smallest details can make all the difference between a clean space and a not-so-clean one. Particles of hair, lint and dust can make your newly cleaned room look dirtier than it really is! After you've finished your basic cleaning, run the lint roller over curtains and anything covered in fabric or upholstery. You will be surprised how much hair and dust you will collect!

Use of essential oils
Many wise housewives spray essential oils in their apartments. (Peppermint is a particularly popular choice!) And where does the smell go first? True, in textiles. In curtains, in furniture upholstery, in carpets and bedspreads. Natural essential oils help freshen the air in the room without leaving behind persistent or oppressive odors. For a long-lasting effect, add a couple of drops of essential oil to the iron, and while ironing, curtains, bedspreads and bed linen will be filled with a pleasant aroma that will linger for a certain time.
Choose a simple bed linen design
When it comes to bedding, mixing different prints and colors can make laundry day more difficult than it needs to be. It's much quicker and easier to wash your bed linen when all your sheets and pillowcases are white (or at least the same color!) Hotels almost always use white bed linen because it's a sign of cleanliness, and because you can use bleach to keep them clean.