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.
If you haven't already, tomorrow is your last chance to vote NO on Proposition
23 -- the statewide ballot initiative supported by climate deniers and paid for
by oil companies and the fossil fuel industry.
Prop 23 would kill thousands of California's clean energy jobs and small
businesses while making our energy bills skyrocket. But this Tuesday, you have
a chance to stop this dangerous proposal and protect California's economic
recovery.
Check out your polling location and make sure you don't miss out on your
chance to vote on Election Day -- Tuesday, November 2.
Below is a brief excert and trailer for a new film that is being put together around drying laundry and clothes with a clothesline...please take the time to watch the trailer and leave a comment as it certainly makes a compelling statement.
"A conflict is raging in the US. Protests, political movements and murder have taken place in the name of an unlikely ideal: clotheslines.
Tens of millions of individuals across Northern America are banned from outdoor line drying by the very communities they live in, forcing them to turn to the dryer. Homeowners who break the rules are fined, sued and even foreclosed on. This ban is not only infringing on civil rights, it's contributing to the environmental and energy crisis.
The dryer is responsible for 6% of the average household's energy bill and it costs residential ratepayers in the US an estimated $5 billion annually.
Corporate America has sold the dryer and the consumption of electricity as a status symbol, and now they have their eyes on a much bigger prize - the world."