Accurately predicting and detecting interstitial lung disease (ILD) patterns given any computed tomography (CT) slice without any pre-processing prerequisites, such as manually delineated regions of interest (ROIs), is a clinically desirable, yet challenging goal. The majority of existing work relies on manually-provided ILD ROIs to extract sampled 2D image patches from CT slices and, from there, performs patch-based ILD categorization. Acquiring manual ROIs is labor intensive and serves as a bottleneck towards fully-automated CT imaging ILD screening over large-scale populations. Furthermore, despite the considerable high frequency of more than one ILD pattern on a single CT slice, previous works are only designed to detect one ILD pattern per slice or patch. To tackle these two critical challenges, we present multi-label deep convolutional neural networks (CNNs) for detecting ILDs from holistic CT slices (instead of ROIs or sub-images). Conventional single-labeled CNN models can be augmented to cope with the possible presence of multiple ILD pattern labels, via 1) continuous-valued deep regression based robust norm loss functions or 2) a categorical objective as the sum of element-wise binary logistic losses. Our methods are evaluated and validated using a publicly available database of 658 patient CT scans under five-fold cross-validation, achieving promising performance on detecting four major ILD patterns: Ground Glass, Reticular, Honeycomb, and Emphysema. We also investigate the effectiveness of a CNN activation-based deep-feature encoding scheme using Fisher vector encoding, which treats ILD detection as spatially-unordered deep texture classification.