Suits, Coats, Shirts — How Should You Actually Hang Different Types of Clothing?
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The difference between doing it right and doing it wrong often comes down to two things: the type of garment and the type of hanger you use.
Why Hanging Method Matters More Than You Think

The physics are straightforward: gravity pulls fabric downward constantly. If a garment isn't supported at the right points, that tension accumulates over time and permanently reshapes the fibers. Wool and structured fabrics are especially vulnerable — they hold their shape under pressure, which means they'll hold the wrong shape just as readily as the right one.
At a Glance: The Right Hanger for Every Garment
Suits
Wide contoured wooden hanger, 17–19"
Heavy Coats
Sturdy wood with non-slip bar
Dress Shirts
Fitted wooden or smooth plastic hanger
Knitwear
Don’t hang — fold flat instead
Dresses
Use built-in loops or padded hanger
Suits: The Most Mishandled Garment in Most Closets
Suits are engineered garments. A well-made suit jacket has internal canvas, shoulder padding, and precise seam construction that gives it its silhouette. Hang it on a wire hanger or a narrow plastic one, and you're essentially collapsing that structure from the inside out.

The trouser bar matters too. Suit trousers should be hung by the cuffs (upside down) to let gravity naturally release creases, or folded once over a bar hanger — never crumpled over a hook.
Coats and Heavy Outerwear: Weight Is the Enemy
Heavy coats — wool overcoats, down jackets, structured blazers — present a different challenge. Their weight alone can cause shoulder distortion if the hanger isn't strong enough or wide enough to distribute the load.
For very heavy outerwear (shearling, heavy wool), some wardrobe specialists recommend folding and storing flat during off-season rather than hanging long-term, as even good hangers can't fully counteract months of gravitational stress on dense fabric.
Dress Shirts and Blouses: More Nuance Than You'd Expect
Dress shirts seem simple, but they're where most people make consistent, low-grade mistakes that add up over time.
Knitwear and Sweaters: The One Type You Shouldn’t Hang
Most knitwear should not be hung at all. Knit fabrics — wool, cashmere, cotton knits — are made from interlocked loops that stretch under sustained tension. Hanging a sweater causes the fabric to elongate at the shoulders and body, creating that characteristic “hanger bump” that’s nearly impossible to reverse.

Dresses and Formal Wear: Match the Hanger to the Construction
Formal dresses often have built-in hanging loops for a reason — use them. These loops are sewn at the balance point of the garment and are designed to support its weight without stressing the fabric or seams.
Beaded or heavily embellished formal wear is best stored flat or in a garment bag lying horizontally — the weight of embellishments can tear fabric at the hang points over time.
Hanger Material Comparison
| Type | Best For | Avoid For | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wire | Short-term transport | Everything else | ✖ Not recommended |
| Thin Plastic | T-shirts, light items | Suits, coats | Acceptable for basics |
| Velvet | Saving space, preventing slipping | Heavy structured garments | Good for light items |
| Wooden (Lacquered Beech) | Suits, coats, shirts, dresses | Knitwear (fold instead) | ✔ Best overall |
Frequently Asked Questions
For most men’s suit jackets, a hanger between 17 and 19 inches wide is ideal. Women’s blazers typically need 14–16 inches. When in doubt, measure the shoulder seam of the jacket and match accordingly.
Yes — hanging damp garments (especially shirts and trousers) can help them dry in shape. Use a wooden or sturdy plastic hanger, not wire, which can rust. Avoid hanging heavy wool items while wet, as the added weight significantly increases stretch risk.
A practical rule: one hanger per garment, with 10–15% extra capacity so garments aren’t pressed together. Crowded closets trap moisture, prevent airflow, and cause fabric to wrinkle from sustained contact pressure.
For most garments, no. However, some wardrobe organizers recommend facing all hangers the same direction — and reversing the direction after wearing an item as a simple way to track what you actually use.
For quality wooden hangers and appropriate garment types, indefinitely. The damage from hanging typically comes from wrong hanger type, wrong size, or wrong garment category. With the right setup, hanging is the best long-term storage method for structured garments.
The Bottom Line
Good clothes are an investment. The way you store them either protects that investment or quietly erodes it. It’s a small habit change with a surprisingly large impact on how long your wardrobe lasts — and how good it looks when you wear it.
Ready to Upgrade Your Closet?
Our premium lacquered beech wood hangers are designed to protect every garment type — from tailored suits to delicate blouses. Built to last, and gentle on your clothes.
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