# How to Iron a Shirt: The Order That Prevents Re-Wrinkling

> Iron a shirt in the right order — collar, cuffs, sleeves, yoke, then the panels — at the care-label heat. A standards-anchored, fabric-by-fabric method.

**Published :** 2026-06-08

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**Summary:** Iron a shirt in the order that stops you re-wrinkling finished areas:
**collar, cuffs, sleeves, yoke, then the front panels and back** — small fixed
zones first. Always set the heat from the **care-label iron dots** — one dot
is low, three is hot — **never by guessing the fabric**. Iron clean shirts
only; heat sets stains permanently.

Ironing has exactly two ways to go wrong, and both are avoidable. You
re-wrinkle a panel you already smoothed, or you scorch the cloth with the wrong
heat. The first is solved by **order**, the second by reading **one symbol on
the care label**. Get those two right and the rest is just technique.

The order works because you start with the **small, fixed zones** — the collar
and cuffs — and finish with the **large panels**. Eton and Downy, a shirtmaker
and a laundry brand, both follow that principle (they differ only on exactly
where the sleeves fall). Iron the big front panel first and you will crush it
again reaching across it to do the collar; do the collar first and nothing you
press later disturbs it. That is the whole rule: fixed, fiddly bits first; big
flat expanses last.

## Before you start

- 🏷️
- **Read the iron symbol on the care label first** — count the dots; a crossed-out iron means *do not iron*.
- 🧺
- **Iron clean shirts only** — heat can set an existing stain permanently.
- 💧
- **Start damp** — iron a newly washed shirt, or spritz a dry one with water (Eton).
- 🔌
- **Match the iron to the dot setting** before you start.

## What you'll need

Four things cover almost every shirt. An iron with a temperature dial that matches
the dot system, and a stable **ironing board** — the rounded "nose" end is what
makes collars, yokes and sleeve caps easy. A **spray bottle** of water
to re-dampen a shirt that has dried out, or to spot-wet a stubborn crease. And a
**pressing cloth** — a thin cotton or muslin square you lay between the soleplate
and the fabric — for anything delicate or dark, where direct heat would shine or
mark the cloth. A sleeve board (a miniature board for the inside of a sleeve) is
a nice extra for dress shirts but not essential; the edge-of-the-board trick in
step three does the same job. You do **not** need starch to iron a shirt well —
it's a finishing preference for extra crispness, not part of the method.

## What heat for which fabric

Here is the rule almost every ironing guide skips: **the care label sets the
heat, not your guess about the fabric.** GINETEX — the body behind the
international ISO 3758 care symbols — states it plainly: the maximum temperature
"must be selected solely on the basis of the care label and not according to the
fibre content." The iron symbol's dots cap the soleplate temperature, and that
ceiling is binding.

Use the table below as a **guide to what the dots usually mean by fabric**
(mapped by the iron-maker Rowenta), with the GINETEX ceiling for each dot — but
if the label and the table ever disagree, the label wins.



A few label symbols are worth knowing on sight — the dots, and the two you must
never override:

**iron-low**

**iron-no**

The **one-dot symbol** doesn't just mean "low" — GINETEX defines it as *iron at
low temperature without steam*. And the **crossed-out iron** is absolute:
GINETEX warns that "irreversible changes must be expected if an iron is used,"
so a garment marked that way never goes near a hot soleplate, at any setting.

Why insist on the label over the fabric? Because the fabric you *think* you have
is often a blend. A shirt that looks and feels like cotton may be a
cotton-polyester mix, and polyester gives way at a temperature cotton shrugs
off — so "it's a cotton shirt, crank it up" is exactly how a blend gets a shiny
scorch. The care label is written by the people who know what's actually in the
cloth; the dots are their instruction, not a suggestion. That is precisely why
GINETEX ties the ceiling to the label and not to your eyes.

If you are unsure of a shirt, Downy's advice is the safe default: **start on a
low setting and increase it** until the wrinkles respond, rather than opening on
high heat and scorching the cloth.

## Iron the shirt, step by step

The order below is one sensible sequence built on the small-zones-first
principle. Two things before the first pass: **work from a damp shirt** — iron a
newly washed one while it's still slightly damp, or spritz a dry one with water,
which Eton notes presses smoother and faster — and **iron only clean shirts**,
since Downy warns that pressing over an existing stain can set it permanently.

### 1. Collar

Unfold the collar flat and iron the **underside first**, working from the points
inward toward the collar stand. Then flip it and finish the top. Starting
underneath means any tiny pucker that appears gets pressed out of sight on the
side nobody sees, and working from the points inward — rather than along the
collar — keeps the tips neat. Don't press a hard fold into the collar stand; the
collar should roll, not crease flat.

### 2. Cuffs

Unbutton the cuffs and lay them flat. Iron the **inside first, then the
outside**, and press *around* the buttons rather than straight over them.

### 3. Sleeves

Sleeves are where a careless press shows most, because a hard crease down the
top of a sleeve is hard to undo. Lay each sleeve flat, line up the seam, and
position it a **few millimetres over the edge of the board** so the soleplate
never reaches the fold — that's what stops you ironing an unwanted crease line
into it. Smooth from the shoulder seam down toward the cuff in long passes. (This
is the one step where Eton and Downy differ on timing — Eton saves the sleeves
for last; do them here or last, your choice, as long as the big panels come after
the collar and cuffs.)

### 4. Yoke and shoulders

Drape the shoulder area — the yoke — over the **rounded end of the board** and
work the iron across it, turning the shirt to reach each shoulder in turn. From
here on, on cotton and linen, plenty of steam earns its keep, since steam works
best on the thicker fabrics (Rowenta).

### 5. Front panels and placket

Work each front panel from the side toward the centre, and use the **tip of the
iron** to press around and between the buttons rather than dragging the full
soleplate over them. Take the placket — the buttoned strip down the front — slowly,
pressing the fabric on either side of each button so the placket lies flat and the
buttons sit square; this is the part on show all day, so it's worth the extra
minute.

### 6. Back

Drape the back over the board in two passes, smoothing from the yoke downward.

### 7. Finish

Hang the shirt and **button the top button straight away** so the collar holds
its shape, let it cool on the hanger, then **turn off and unplug the iron**.

> Steam works best on thick fabrics — cotton, linen and wool (Rowenta).
> **Dry-iron silk and satin**, which can develop water spots, and never add
> steam to a garment whose label shows the one-dot symbol, which GINETEX defines
> as *iron without steam*.

## When it goes sideways

Even with the right order and heat, a couple of things go wrong often enough to
be worth a plan. Here are three quick fixes for the usual ironing mishaps, each
of which takes seconds once you know the move rather than re-doing the whole
shirt:

- **A crease in the wrong place.** Don't try to press it out dry — re-dampen the
  area with a spritz of water and iron it again.
- **Shine on dark cotton.** Iron the garment **inside out**, keep the iron
  moving, and lay a pressing cloth between the soleplate and the fabric
  (Rowenta).
- **A delicate you're nervous about.** Drop to the low one-dot setting, use
  little or no steam, don't hold the iron in one place, and use a pressing cloth
  — Rowenta's protocol for silk, satin, nylon and lace.

## Iron safety: burns and scalds

The soleplate runs between 120°C and 210°C — hot enough to cause a burn — so
the safety here is not optional.

> **Warning:**
> - **Burn vs scald:** the hot soleplate causes a dry-heat *burn*; steam causes a wet-heat *scald* that can injure deeper tissue while the surface looks only mildly damaged (NHS inform; Healthline). The longer the contact, the worse the injury — so keep fingers clear of the steam vent and the burst-steam button.
> - **First aid:** cool a burn under *cool — not cold — running water* (the Red Cross says 5–20 minutes; Mayo Clinic about 10). **Do not use ice**, which can further damage the skin, and do not apply creams or ointments (Healthline).
> - **Match the cloth to the dot band:** keep polyester, rayon and wool blends on the medium two-dot setting and silk, satin, nylon and lace on the low one-dot setting (Rowenta); iron dark cotton inside out; and press carefully around buttons.

## The bottom line

Two rules carry the whole job. **Order:** small fixed zones first — collar,
cuffs — then the big panels, so nothing you press later undoes earlier work.
**Heat:** set it from the care-label dots, never from a guess about the fabric,
and treat a crossed-out iron as final. Everything else — damp the shirt, steam
the thick stuff, dry-iron the silk, hang it the moment you finish — is detail in
service of those two.

One boundary worth stating: this is *iron* heat. For the **wash** temperature
that gets a shirt clean in the first place, that is a different number on a
different symbol — see our [laundry temperature
guide](/blog/laundry-temperature-guide/index.md).

## Keep reading

- [Laundry temperature guide](/blog/laundry-temperature-guide/index.md) — the wash
  temperature that gets a shirt clean, the companion to this iron-heat guide.
- [How to wash cotton](/blog/how-to-wash-cotton/index.md) — getting a cotton shirt
  clean and crease-ready before it reaches the board.
- [How to wash polyester](/blog/wash-polyester/index.md) — caring for the synthetics
  that need the cooler iron setting.
- [How to wash silk without ruining it](/blog/wash-silk-without-ruining-it/index.md) —
  the delicate that you dry-iron on low.
- [How to remove set-in stains](/blog/remove-set-in-stains/index.md) — deal with the
  stain *before* you iron, because heat sets it permanently.
