What she said.
I use the permanent press/wrinkle free/cool down setting and then make sure to be there with a hand full of hangers when the dryer stops.
What she said.
I use the permanent press/wrinkle free/cool down setting and then make sure to be there with a hand full of hangers when the dryer stops.
Same here. The Zen of Ironing. Or as Cool Hand Luke’s Captain said, “You got to get your mind right”. ![]()
This is brilliant. Hang the day’s shirt during my morning shower.
I shall try this tomorrow.
mmm
I’ve never found this to be effective at all.
It helps to snap the shirt hard, or to run your palm firmly over the biggest creases. Give the steam treatment a bit of help.
Maybe I’m just wrinkled enough myself, that I always felt the “snap” purplehorseshoe describes, plus the shower treatment, was “good enough”!
Honestly, if they are from last year, I would probly just wash them anyway, unless doing laundry is a hardship for you. I realize not everyone has access to washers and dryers. If they are things that tend to wrinkle, I’d probably hang them to dry so you don’t have wrinkles moving forward.
Me, either. Not even turning on the shower for 20 minutes. And I too find ironing a pleasant activity
I think a decent hanger helps. I do most of my drying my hanging it on an indoor rail in the only place I had available, which happens to be above a radiator. It dries crinkle free. Even linen trousers dry neatly. They’re all on velvet lined hangers so they stay well in place on the hanger, and I hang everything neatly with any buttons or zips done up. It’s all about keeping the shape they’re supposed to be in.
So hang them in the bathroom, but neatly, done up, and on a decent hanger.
Straight water sprayed (lightly misted) works great. No need to add anything to it.
This always works.
Just spraying with a light mist of straight water also usually works, and you don’t even have to re-hang them.