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Airing your clean laundry: Skip the dryer, rack up savings

Posted Mar 24 2008, 12:33 PM by Donna Freedman
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Tired of putting quarters into the dryer? Save two bits and do your bit for the environment by getting a drying rack.

According to a group called Project Laundry List, electric dryers amount for 5% to 10% of residential electricity usage in the United States. Racks are the green/frugal solution for apartment dwellers who don't have access to outdoor drying.

They're also useful to homeowners in places where housing covenants ban clotheslines. Apparently the sight of damp clothing flapping in the breeze brings down property values. A Boston Globe article quoted Frank Rathbun, a spokesman for the Community Associations Institute: "If you imagine driving into a community where the yards have clothes hanging all over the place, I think the aesthetics, the curb appeal, and probably the home values would be affected by that."

I wonder if he means all clothes, or just boxers and briefs?

Clean and green
I've been a fan of drying racks since I was a single mother in Philadelphia. Unable to afford the coin-op, I did all our laundry by hand -- including my daughter's cloth diapers -- and draped it to dry. Even after I married and had a washer and dryer at home, I still used racks.

Now I'm single again and an apartment dweller, and I've got three wooden folding racks: two large and one small. The big ones came from Seattle thrift stores for $5 each; the small one was a gift from my mom three decades ago. (More on that later.)

I still do a fair amount of hand laundry, which is easy because my clothing is simple and not heavily soiled. Under certain circumstances, I will rewear clothes without washing. Between these practices and my drying racks, I spend only $2.25 a month in laundry costs: $1.25 to wash and $1 to dry. (Machine-drying helps keep towels, washcloths and jeans from mildewing in Seattle's damp climate.)

Everything that isn't terrycloth or denim goes in the dryer for five minutes, just enough to get out the spin-cycle wrinkles. After that, it goes on racks or plastic hangers all around my apartment. Sheets and pillowcases also go on racks. The top sheet usually ends up draped over my (unplugged) halogen floor lamp.

I wish I could dry outdoors, having fond childhood memories of sheets that smelled like spring air. Of course, I have less-than-fond memories of hanging clothes and linens out on below-freezing mornings. They'd hang out all day long and eventually dry; they'd freeze first, and flap as stiff as signboards in the breeze.

However, I have to admit that December-dried sheets smelled pretty good, too, and that a little Jergens took care of my chapped hands.

Racking up savings
Still not convinced? Here are a few more persuaders from Project Laundry List:

•    You can save more than $100 a year on your electric bill.
•    Clothes last longer. That lint filter is made up of teeny little pieces of your garments.
•    Indoor racks can humidify indoor air in dry winter weather.

Plenty of discount store and online marketers sell drying racks. You may also find them in thrift shops, and possibly at yard or rummage sales.

When I moved to Philadelphia almost 30 years ago, my mom added a small drying rack to my small pile of belongings. I'd already bought two large racks because I knew I'd be doing laundry by hand. Looking at the little one made me want to laugh.

A few weeks later, I finally recognized what she was trying to say: I love you. I worry about you. I want to help. So I made sure to tell her how useful the rack turned out to be.

It's unlikely you'll have such a deep emotional attachment to the act of drying your clothes. But if you're deeply into environmentalism, or saving quarters, using racks can be very satisfying.

If not, you can at least be glad that your clothes don't disappear gradually into the lint filter.

Comments

 

Well the mention of adding humidity into the air during winter is a great idea. My wife is from NJ and her Mum used a clothes line outside 3/4 of the year, and a drying rack in the basement. We have adopted  similar habits with plastic hangers for shirts and towels, and we hang many blankets and sheets from hooks and clips we added to the basement ceiling.  I will start running the dryer less to determine the energy savings-thanks;-)

The heating element in my dryer broke.  I still use it to tumble the clothes.  It takes about 3-4 hrs.

There's a guy at work who continually asks me why I hang clothes on the line, & I always tell him, "So they'll dry, duh!"  And HE calls ME sarcastic!  I grew up in a neighborhood/subdivision that restricted things to the point of having a meeting to decide the color to repaint our own house, and 1) We painted the house fluorescent orange in spite, & 2) there was never (before, during, or after) a restriction on clotheslines.

Living overseas now for many years I've used drying racks in both Europe and Asia..there are always a few coin operated self laundries but they are expense and crowded...besides, there is nothing comparable to getting into a bed with line or rack dried sheets!

I've been using a clothes line for almost 18 years.  I live in a nice neighborhood where just today a house sold on the same day the "for sale" sign was posted.  Apparently my clothes line doesn't affect property values, and my house is one of the nicest in the neighborhood with tons of curb appeal.--I write this because a clothes line doesn't have to be ugly.  Mine is made of wood, is painted white, has a finial at each end, and has Victorian brackets under each "arm" of the clothes line.  Several of my neighbors also hang out their clothes, including the head of our neighborhood association.  I only dry my clothes in the dryer when absolutely necessary; however, I live in Texas where the weather is warm much of the year.

As to the comment from doc implying clothes racks and clothes hung everywhere are a turn off, this isn't so.--I was married for over 18 years and my husband never objected to a clothes rack, clothes on hangers, or clothes lines.  He didn't leave me, he passed away.  I now have a boyfriend, and he's doesn't care where I hang my clothes.  

Another benefit of air drying clothing is that if you don't get a stain out in the wash the first time, you can try washing it again after it air dries.  On the other hand, if a stained garment goes into the dryer, the heat often sets the stain permanently, and the garment is ruined.

Hanging damp clothes on a hanger saves time and money too.  I do the 5- minute- in- the- dryer- to -remove- wrinkles bit, put shirts and dresses on their hangers and place the hangers over open doorways to dry.  Dry clothing is ready to go straight from the doorway to closet.

I never use a dryer because my apt. has no room for it.  I save all my clothes hangers from stores (I ask cashier to leave the hangers please).  I hang all my clothes on hangers.  The sheets and towels I put on top of a radiator year long and in the winter, I put a large piece of foil over the radiator so it will not burn the clothes.

The towels dry quickly on the radiator and I use every hood, nail and curtain rods, together with some $1.00 store clothes hangers which open and hold about 12 hangers and hang that in the bathroom stall.  My electric bill is the same as it was almost 30 years ago.

In the summertime, I use the fire escape to hang floor mats which I wash in woolite on hand wash cycle.  They dry quickly and the entire home smells of the softner.

What about all of the electricity (and time) you use ironing all of those wrinkles out of the clothes after they have dried on the racks? The dryer takes out most of the wrinkles but racks don't.

Laundry drying in inconsicuous places is one thing, but hanging it across yards and making it visible everywhere looks cheap and ghetto.

We lived east of Seattle for a few years and drying your clothes outside was strictly taboo..think people thought you were poor even tho we had a clothes dryer. But like you, I truly loved the smell of line dryed clothes and sheets. When I was growing up my parents did'nt have a dryer so guess you could say I was already adjusted. Well 27 yrs. ago we moved back to Seattle and the first thing we purchased was...you guessed it..a new clothesline. But I also have my wooden racks, just like my mom had in " The Good Ole Days" Thanks for sharing a memory!!!!!

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