📐 FIELD GUIDE ILLUSTRATION
Original illustration by PestControlBasics.com. Use anatomical labels above to confirm your identification.
📋 Step-by-Step
1
Find all infested items first
Inspect every wool, cashmere, silk, and feather item — coats, sweaters, blankets, stuffed animals, taxidermy, piano felts. Look for larvae (cream, 4-8mm), silken tubes or webbing, and shed skins. Organize finds before starting treatment.
2
Launder all washable items in hot water
Wash at 50°C (122°F) minimum. Dry at high heat for 30 minutes. This kills all life stages. For dry-clean-only items: have them professionally dry-cleaned (chemical vapor treatment kills all stages).
3
Freeze non-washable items for 7 days
Items that can't be washed or dry-cleaned: seal in plastic bags and freeze at 0°F for minimum 7 days. This kills eggs, larvae, and pupae. Allow to warm to room temperature before removing from bags to prevent condensation damage.
4
Apply pheromone traps for adult monitoring
Webbing clothes moth pheromone traps (Safer Brand, Moth-Prevention) detect adult activity and help you confirm whether the infestation is controlled. Place in the areas where infested items were found.
5
Apply Permethrin or bifenthrin spray to carpet edges, closet surfaces
Apply residual spray to bare wood surfaces in closets, edges of carpets, and dark undisturbed areas where larvae pupate. Do not spray clothing directly — treat the surfaces where larvae travel.
💡 Pro Tips
- The adult moths you see fluttering around are not the damaging stage — the larvae are hidden in folds of clothing and are rarely seen until damage is extensive
- Cedar oil and lavender are repellents, not killers — they may deter new moths from entering protected storage but don't kill an existing infestation
- Regular inspection (every 3-6 months) of stored seasonal clothing is the only reliable prevention
- Store seasonal clothing in sealed bags or cedar chests with lavender sachets — this prevents future infestations after treatment
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