Laundry
So, the Laundromat's Closed—Here’s How to Hand Wash Clothes in Your Small Apartment
If you're stuck at home without a washer and dryer, worry not.
Photo by Julia Gartland

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3 Comments
GigiR
April 14, 2020
Hi. You know, you could try this re drying. If you have an umbrella, open it and put the handle down into a tall bin or waste basket for stability. Drape clothes to be dried over it.
If you had something to from
which to suspend the handle, you could hang the umbrella upside down and drape or clothes pin washed items of the edge. You’d have to balance hanging items on opposite sides.
Also, bikes. Turn your precious mechanical steed into a clothes rack. You might need to cover it with old towels (yet another use) first so you don’t get chain oil on stuff.
Last one, you could use your rolling pin to press out excess water from washed items into a pad of towels underneath. It would help things like jeans dry a bit faster.
One thing: don’t be surprised if you find some items develop a bit of an odor if you are just line drying them all the time. Bacteria can kind of build up over time. Line drying works best with a fresh breeze blowing through the clothes. Several hot water rinses can sometimes tackle that. You might have to resort to some sort of odour squelching product designed for this purpose.
Also, garments generally have been treated with a sizing material, a kind of starch or glue, to help the weave of the fibres line up properly and for the garment to keep its shape. If it’s washable, give the item a wash to remove the sizing. It can contribute to the odour problem, as well as yellow a light coloured garment over time.
Lastly, your iron is your friend. It can help with that last bit of drying.
That’s all I’ve got.
If you had something to from
which to suspend the handle, you could hang the umbrella upside down and drape or clothes pin washed items of the edge. You’d have to balance hanging items on opposite sides.
Also, bikes. Turn your precious mechanical steed into a clothes rack. You might need to cover it with old towels (yet another use) first so you don’t get chain oil on stuff.
Last one, you could use your rolling pin to press out excess water from washed items into a pad of towels underneath. It would help things like jeans dry a bit faster.
One thing: don’t be surprised if you find some items develop a bit of an odor if you are just line drying them all the time. Bacteria can kind of build up over time. Line drying works best with a fresh breeze blowing through the clothes. Several hot water rinses can sometimes tackle that. You might have to resort to some sort of odour squelching product designed for this purpose.
Also, garments generally have been treated with a sizing material, a kind of starch or glue, to help the weave of the fibres line up properly and for the garment to keep its shape. If it’s washable, give the item a wash to remove the sizing. It can contribute to the odour problem, as well as yellow a light coloured garment over time.
Lastly, your iron is your friend. It can help with that last bit of drying.
That’s all I’ve got.
Smaug
March 31, 2020
Hand washing is, on the other hand, not a great way to disinfect. Water heaters should never be set higher than 140 degrees because of scalding danger, and in apartment buildings are likely to be more like 120, and that's straight hot water at the source. You could, of course, use bleach (with gloves!) or Lysol laundry disinfectant- if you can find them- but you'll have to do some pretty extensive rinsing- bleach is especially hard to get rid of. Trying to dry any significant amount of laundry in an apartment is indeed an act of desperation- there are some pretty neat folding racks that you can set in a warm- or breezy- place.
Tutiesmom
March 31, 2020
What great ideas! When the going gets tough, the tough hand wash their clothes!






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