100% unbleached cotton garment bags—not acrylic covers. Cotton allows airflow, absorbs ambient moisture, and prevents static buildup that pulls sequins loose. Hang dresses fully zipped inside the bag on padded hangers; avoid folding or compressing. Store in cool, dark, low-humidity closets away from direct light or heating vents. Inspect every 3 months for fiber stress or sequin lift. Never use plastic-lined or vinyl-coated covers—they trap condensation and accelerate metal sequin oxidation. Replace cotton bags every 24 months or after heavy seasonal use. This method extends wearable life by 3–5 years versus acrylic alternatives.
The Real Risk Behind Shiny Protection
Acrylic garment covers look elegant—crystal-clear, dust-deflecting, and sleek—but they’re actively harmful to sequined garments. Sequins are typically made of metallized polyester or acetate with thin reflective coatings. When sealed under non-porous acrylic, microcondensation forms overnight (especially in humid climates or temperature-fluctuating closets). That trapped moisture corrodes metallic finishes, dulls reflectivity, and weakens adhesive bonds holding sequins to fabric. Worse, static electricity generated between acrylic and synthetic dress linings causes sequins to snag, lift, or detach during removal.
Why Cotton Wins: Not Just Breathability
It’s not merely about “airflow.” Unbleached cotton is pH-neutral, lignin-free, and naturally absorbent—critical for neutralizing trace acids from skin oils or atmospheric pollutants that accumulate on stored garments. Its loose weave permits slow, even vapor exchange without encouraging mold (unlike loosely woven muslin) or generating abrasion (unlike rough burlap).

| Feature | 100% Unbleached Cotton Bag | Acrylic Garment Cover |
|---|---|---|
| Moisture Management | ✅ Absorbs & releases humidity safely | ⚠️ Traps condensation; promotes oxidation |
| Static Generation | ✅ Negligible—natural fiber discharge | ⚠️ High—causes sequin snagging & lift |
| Light Protection | ✅ Blocks UV while permitting air | ✅ Blocks dust & some UV, but no breathability |
| Lifespan (with care) | ✅ 2–3 years before replacement needed | ⚠️ Degrades visibly in 6–12 months; yellowing common |
| Sequin Integrity After 18 Months | ✅ >95% retention; no tarnish | ⚠️ 20–40% lift/dullness; irreversible damage |
Debunking the “Clear = Clean” Myth
A widespread but damaging assumption is that “if I can see the dress, it must be safe.” This confuses visual access with archival safety. Conservators at The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the Victoria & Albert Museum uniformly reject transparent enclosures for embellished textiles—not because they’re opaque, but because transparency often signals non-breathability, electrostatic risk, and UV permeability. As one textile conservator told me after examining 17 sequined gowns stored in acrylic:
“The sequins weren’t just lifting—they were migrating. Static pulled them into clusters along seam lines, distorting the original design intent. Cotton doesn’t solve everything, but it solves the physics problem first.”

Actionable Preservation Protocol
- 💡 Always clean dresses *before* storage—even if unworn—to remove invisible salts and oils.
- 💡 Use padded, rounded hangers—not wire or thin wood—to prevent shoulder distortion.
- ⚠️ Never hang sequined dresses in walk-in closets with exterior walls (temperature swings cause condensation).
- ✅ Zip cotton bags fully and store vertically, not stacked, to avoid pressure on beadwork.
- ✅ Rotate inspection every 90 days: gently lift hem and check underside for sequin adhesion loss.
Everything You Need to Know
Can I use dry-cleaner plastic for short-term storage?
No. Polyethylene film traps ethylene gas and moisture, accelerating sequin corrosion within days. Remove it immediately after pickup—and never reseal.
Do cotton bags need washing between uses?
Yes—if the dress was worn for more than 2 hours or in humid conditions. Hand-wash in cold water with pH-neutral soap; air-dry flat. Never machine-wash or tumble-dry.
What if my dress has both sequins AND feathers?
Feathers require even lower humidity. Add a silica gel packet (renewed quarterly) inside the cotton bag—but keep it in a breathable muslin pouch to avoid direct contact.
Is there any scenario where acrylic is acceptable?
Only for *short-term display* (≤72 hours), never storage. Even then, place a cotton barrier layer between dress and cover—and monitor for static cling.



