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Listing all posts with label clotheslines. Show all posts.
  1. Protect your dark clothes from damage by following these simple rules:

    First determine if the garment really needs washing or can be worn again. Every wash does a bit of damage. Never wash light colored clothing with dark items. Lint from cotton items will often adhere to dark items making them look "fuzzy".
    • Choose the right temperature. Use the coolest temperature possible when washing dark clothing.
    • Choose the right detergent. Use a detergent formulated for dark colours. If you don't have one available, use the smallest feasible amount for cleaning your clothes. If you must pretreat a stain, test it first in an inconspicuous spot to ensure there is no fading.
    • Select the right washing cycle. Unless your dark clothing is caked with dirt, select a gentle cycle with the least amount of agitation to prevent damage to fibers. Handwashing is always a good option for delicate dark items.
    • Load the washing machine correctly. Turn garments inside out before washing. This will prevent fibers from becoming damaged and showing frayed ends and attracting lint.
    • Avoid the sun. Drying in direct sunlight can bleach fabrics. Use the clothes dryer or hang clothes in indirect light.



     


  2.  

    Used correctly, your clothes dryers is a great help. However it can also be a dangerous appliance if not used properly.

    • Always clean the lint filter before use. Even if it looks lint free, this is a good habit to get into.
    • Spin your washing as dry as possible to reduce time in the clothes dryer.
    • Never leave the dryer on when you leave the house. Built up lint outside the drum can ignite.
    • Don't overload the dryer. Washing will dry better with a lighter load.
    • Install a smoke alarm in your home and test it regularly to ensure that it is working.

    Only use the dryer when you really need to. Use the clothesline to save power and money.

     

  3. Here are some great ideas to help you save money and help the environment at the same time.

    Energy costs - financial and environmental

    Using electricity to create heat is always an energy intensive exercise; so clothes dryers do tend to be electricity hogs. According to the California Energy Commission, the average clothes dryer will cost around  $1,500 to operate over its life span.

    Environmentally speaking, the energy consumed by a clothes dryer can be anywhere from 1800 to 5000 watts per hour, or 1.8 to 5KwHr. Given that 1.5 pounds of carbon emissions per kilowatt hour are generated in the production of electricity by a coal fired power station (give or take a bit), over a year this comes to a considerable amount.

    Benefits of line drying

    The benefits of a solar clothes dryer, aka a clothes line are many; here's just a few:

    - Initial outlay is cheaper than a clothes dryer
    - No ongoing energy costs
    - No greenhouse gas emissions from usage
    - The sun helps to kill bacteria
    - A fresh smell for your clothes without the use of chemicals


     Read more:  http://www.greenlivingtips.com/articles/254/1/Line-drying-and-clothes-lines.html

  4. I read this with interest...

    A variety of interests are involved in the controversy about clothes lines, including: frugal living, global warming, individual rights, the economy, private property, class, aesthetics, health, energy, national security and nostalgia.

    When mechanical dryers were first introduced, only well-to-do families could afford them and they became associated with affluence. However, now that most people can afford a mechanical dryer, clothes lines have become associated with a "home-town" character in neighborhoods because they are indicative of a low-crime area. (Clothes lines are used less frequently in high-crime areas because of the risk of clothes being stolen.) Also, environmental concerns and higher energy prices have created a new generation of clothes line advocates. Still, the old association with poverty persists in some people's minds.

    Those against the use of clothes lines include:

    • some associated with oil and coal companies
    • some associated with electric and gas utilities
    • some associated with peddling idealized life styles
    • mechanical clothes dryer manufacturers and retailers
    • some associated with appliance repair shops
    • people who find clothes lines aesthetically displeasing
    • older people who still associate mechanical dryers with wealth

    Those in favor of using clothes lines include:

    • people who believe that clothesline use will reduce reliance on foreign energy for national security reasons
    • people who believe that clothesline use will reduce global warming
    • people who believe that clothes blowing in the breeze are aesthetically pleasant
    • older people who are nostalgic for times when everyone used clothes lines
    • people who associate them with low-crime areas
    • people who prefer to use clothes lines for personal reasons (save money, get exercise, no static cling, etc.)

    The controversy surrounding the use of clothes lines has prompted many governments to pass "right-to-dry" laws allowing their use.[1] According to Ian Urbina, a reporter for The New York Times, "the majority of the 60 million people who now live in the country’s roughly 300,000 private communities" are forbidden from using outdoor clothes lines.

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  5. clothesline
    This may be useful during the colder months:
     

    Laundry may be dried indoors rather than outdoors for a variety of reasons including:

    • inclement weather
    • physical disability
    • lack of space for a line
    • legal restrictions
    • to raise the humidity level indoors
    • to lower the air temperature indoors
    • convenience
    • to preserve privacy

    Several types of devices are available for indoor drying. A drying rack or clotheshorse can help save space in an apartment or clothes lines can be strung in the basement during the winter. Small loads can simply be draped over furniture or a shower curtain pole. The drying time indoors will typically be longer than outdoor drying because of the lack of direct solar radiation and the convective assistance of the wind.

    The evaporation of the moisture from the clothes will cool the indoor air and increase the humidity level, which may or may not be desirable. In cold, dry weather, moderate increases in humidity makes most people feel more comfortable. In warm weather, increased humidity makes most people feel even hotter. Increased humidity can also increase growth of fungi, which can cause health problems.

    To read more go to:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothes_line