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Dry Your Clothes for Free

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Want to do your laundry the eco-friendly way? It’s a simple, two-step process:

1)    Wash most everything in cold water (The only thing I wash in hot water is towels.)

2)    Hang your laundry out to dry.

Clothesline

Benefits?

•    Save energy, lower your electric or gas bill, and reduce your carbon footprint (the amount of energy you burn that contributes to climate change).

•    Longer-lasting clothes, since washing in hot water can fade colors and drying in hot air can shrink fabrics.

•    No static cling, one of the hazards of hot air drying.

•    Clean, fresh smell. No need for “natural fragrance” dryer sheets (which means more money savings).

What Kind of Clothes Line or Rack Should You Buy?

The Line

You can use a length of rope you already have, but make sure it’s thin enough to be able to clip a clothes pin to. Otherwise, you’ll have to throw things over the top of the line, which works unless a strong (i.e., fast-drying) breeze is about. You can find several clothes line options in the Big Green Purse store, or at your local hardware store. NOTE: Most lines stretch over time, so you may need to buy a line tightener to keep the line taut enough so that the clothes don’t end up dragging on the ground.

Clothesline 3 This foldable clothes line frame (pictured right) is terrific if you have a flat space you can mount it on. What I like about it is that it folds out of the way when not in use.

You can also try a rotary line dryer. Hang the laundry, then use a hand crank to easily raise the whole load another 16 inches or so to catch the breeze and dry quickly. For something simpler, install a retractable clothes line in your bathroom or laundry room. These lines can’t accommodate a lot of laundry at once, but they’re great for socks and underwear.

Dryer Rack

Dryer rack Dryer racks can’t be beat for convenience, and many of them are large enough to handle an entire load of laundry at one time. I use a light-weight wooden rack I put on my sunny back porch in the summer. My washer and dryer are in a big utility closet behind louvered doors in my master bathroom; in the winter, I just set up the rack in there. The humidity from the clothes helps humidify the dry winter air. Here are several types of dryer racks you can try


Clothespins

Use the sturdiest clothespins you can find. Choose wood, not plastic, and store the pins inside and away from the elements when they’re not in use to keep them from getting dirty or wet if it rains.

If you hang your laundry in the sun…

Sunshine naturally beats back germs and odors, which is why I used to dry the kids’ cloth diapers in the sun. But the sun can also bleach or fade clothes. Turn shirts, blouses, and pants inside-out before you hang them to keep their color bright, and bring them inside as soon as they’re dry.

Stiff  towels? 

Line drying is terrific for sports wear, underwear, jeans, pants, towels, sheets, blouses, socks, and shirts. But towels? They can get a little stiff  or crunchy when they line dry. Some people find that adding white vinegar to the fabric softener dispenser helps soften their towels. I prefer to dry mine on the line almost completely, then toss them into the dryer to fluff up for ten minutes or so.

What about pet fur?

My throw rugs collect a LOT of fur from my dog and two cats. Tumble drying is still the most effective way to capture all that fur, even when I shake my rugs out before I was them. I tumble the rugs for about 15 minutes to capture the fur, then finish the drying

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RunningFoxNJ 5 pts

I'd consider hanging things in our garage, but our garage is full, dirty with lawn equipment (including the mower- grass is one of my worst allergens) and it's humid.

Does anyone have any other suggestions on how to conserve energy drying clothes or hang-drying them inside without making a mess or taking up too much space?

RunningFoxNJ 5 pts

I'd love to hang dry my clothes outside- but I'm allergic to everything out there! :-( That's why I have to use a dryer. I do try and dry delicates or things that shouldn't go in the dryer on drying racks in my basement- but we only have so much room to hang-dry inside!

luisa.rodriguez 6 pts

I totally line dry outside, so my clothes stay the right size..

____________________________________
http://mustbeliberating.blogspot.com/

Hey Jen 8 pts

That's really interesting. What kind of insects would you have to worry about? Do you have lines that you use or just hang them where you can?

zofem 5 pts

For me in Cameroon, that is what we do always. we have limitted alternatives but to hand our cloths outside, in between two large trees, sometimes on our hedges (prune fences). Even sometimes we dry our cloths on the carpet glass which is natural. but the disadvantage of these is that once after your cloths is dried and you dont iron it, you might contract some skill diseases (infections). The ironing serves as a disinfectant to those micro-organisms, insects which has passed (piss) on your dress.

This is a beautiful article. I see different practices in drying dresses from one another. this is good.

many thanks for sharing your thought with us

Zoneziwoh

Peace and Security Fellow
Conflict Security and Development Group (CSDG)
King's College London
African Leadership Centre (ALC)
Nairobi - Kenya

&

Maegan Tintari 7 pts

I don't actually use a line but I do hang-dry most of our clothes. While it is eco-friendly, I mostly do it because the dryer seems to fade, shrink and ruin clothes. It's a great tip though for long-lasting clothes.

Maegan Tintari is a Fashion, Home & Lifestyle blogger from Los Angeles. Go to ...love Maegan ( http://www.lovemaegan.com ) to find out more! ...Style Editor here, at BlogHer

Hey Jen 8 pts

We make our own laundry soap with washing soda, borax and an all natural soap that I make. We also use the vinegar and while it smells a little in the washer, it comes out fine and there are absolutely no smells. The clothes come out much nicer now. :)

Hey Jen 8 pts

I've been hanging my clothing out for about a year now. Year round in fact. Even during the worst of the pollen season and I have bad allergies. It takes a little longer in the winter, but it eventually dries!

My dryer only gets used ...well I can't actually remember the last time we used it.

midnightbliss 7 pts

i also use line drying in the sun and i love the feel of the clothes.it save a lot of electricity too.

Al_Pal 5 pts

I hang-dry on hangers, in my garage and bathroom. It takes a long time but making clothes last, stay the right size, and not cracking the images is worth it!

Angie_HomeGrown 5 pts

Nothing smells better than slipping between line dried sheets after a long day.

I built my own heavy duty clothes lines and did a DIY How-to for my blog so that others could see it is a project anyone can accomplish with little effort.

http://bigredcouch.com/journal/?p=4960

To save more money on your laundry use baking soda and vinegar to remove odors, kill the bacteria that causes them, and keep your colors bright. Most laundry detergent is filled with fragrance it only masks the bacteria in the laundry. The baking soda and vinegar actually kills bacteria, virus, mold, etc.

Vinegar is a wonderful clothes softener and doesn't add wax to your clothes. The smell of vinegar does not linger after drying.

I have several natural laundry tips on my blog. http://bigredcouch.com/journal/?p=3441

Most often the use of commercial laundry detergent can be cut back to 1/8th of a measure and your clothes will still be clean.

HomeGrown http://www.bigredcouch.com/journal

Celeste Lindell 5 pts

T-shirts last a lot longer and shrink less when you hang them. I have clothes lines in my basement laundry room. Of course, when my laundry gets out of control (as it is right now), I run out of line space pretty quickly.

I'd love to have a clothesline in my back yard, but city ordinance prohibits them where I live. (One of these days I'm going to take on city hall so I can hang my clothes outside and keep chickens, too!)

Celeste Lindell
averagejane.blogs.com ( http://averagejane.blogs.com )

victorias_view 150 pts moderator

It's so dusty here in the summertime that I wouldn't dare to put my clothes outside. But Ikea has drying racks that attach to your wall and fold down when you are down with them. I love them and use the racks all of the time!

kaherbert 5 pts

I'm in Houston. Line drying outside doesn't work for me because of the pollution and pollen. So I use a drying rack in my laundry room. I add an osculating fan if the humidity is high.