Clothes line
A clothes line, also spelled clothesline, also known as a wash line, is a device for hanging clothes on for the purpose of drying or airing out the articles. It is made of any type of rope, cord, wire, or twine that has been stretched between two points, outdoors or indoors, above ground level. Washing lines are attached either from a post or a wall, and are frequently located in back gardens, or on balconies. Longer washing lines often have props holding up the mid-section so the weight of the clothing does not pull the clothesline down to the ground.
Clothing that has recently been washed is hung over the line to dry. Nowadays it is held in place with clothespins, but until the 19th century laundry was simply draped over the line, as is visible in artistic depictions of clotheslines from earlier periods. The clothespin was not invented until 1809.
More elaborate rotary washing lines save space and are typically retractable and square or triangular in shape, with multiple lines being used. Some can be folded up when not in use. In Scotland, many tenement buildings have a "drying green", which is a communal area predominantly used for clothes lines. A "drying green" may also be used as a recreational space for tenants. The overhead clothes airer is an indoor version hung at ceiling level and also raised and lowered with pulleys.
Comparison with clothes dryer
Both clothes lines and clothes dryers serve the same purpose: drying clothes that have been recently washed, or that are wet in general. Here are some advantages and disadvantages of using a clothes line instead of a mechanical dryer:Advantages
- Saves money.
- Zero greenhouse gas emissions per load.
- Less fabric wear and tear.
- Laundry items do not shrink.
- No static cling and no perfume smells throughout the neighborhood from fabric softener and anti-static dryer sheets.
- Laundry items stay softer to the touch, and may be less wrinkled.
- Laundry items often do not need ironing if line dried in a breeze.
- Avoids the potential of airborne lint and reduced air quality.
- Eliminates the noise from a mechanical clothes dryer.
- Does not vent indoor air to the outside and waste the large volume of conditioned air that a mechanical dryer's blower does.
- For a simple line drying arrangement the repair and replacement costs are about $20.00 per 1,000 loads of laundry or 2 cents per load. For non-commercial mechanical clothes drying the repair and replacement costs are about $200.00 per 1,000 loads of laundry or 20 cents per load.
Disadvantages
- Putting laundry on a line usually takes more time than putting it into a mechanical dryer.
- Laundry items need to be hung indoors during rainy weather, or may get wet if the weather changes.
- Neighbors may find it aesthetically unpleasant.
- Exposing laundry can lessen privacy, showing information about inhabitants' living habits.
- There may be a risk of theft or vandalism of clothes depending on where the clothes are hung.
- Environmental contaminants such as soil, dust, smoke, automotive or industrial pollutants, pollen and bird and animal droppings can come in contact with clothing.
- Clothespins can leave imprints on the clothes.
- The line presents a hazard to pedestrians, depending on line mounting height, pedestrian height, and lighting conditions.
Drying laundry indoors
- inclement weather
- physical disability
- lack of space for a line
- reduce the damage to fabrics from sun's UV rays
- legal restrictions
- to raise the humidity level indoors, and lower the air temperature indoors
- convenience
- to preserve privacy and as a safeguard against vandalism
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 make 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.
An average-sized wash load will convert approximately of ambient heat into latent heat that is stored in the evaporated water, as follows. A typical 4 kg load of laundry can contain 2.2 kg of water, after being spun in a laundry machine. To determine how much heat has been converted in drying a load of laundry, weigh the clothes when they are wet and then again after the clothes have dried. The difference is the weight of the water that was evaporated from them. Multiply that weight in kg by 2,257 kJ/kg, which is the heat of vaporization per kilogram, to obtain the number of kilojoules that went into evaporating the water, or multiply by 0.6250 kWh/kg to get kilowatt-hours. If the moisture later condenses inside the house, the latent heat will return to ambient heat which could increase the temperature of the air in the room slightly. To obtain a good approximation of the effect this would have in a particular situation, the process can be traced on a psychrometric chart.
Factors that determine the drying duration
Various factors determine the duration of drying and can help to decide whether to use a drier or a clothes line- Placement of clothes line
- The environmental temperature - increase of temperature decreases the drying duration
- The environmental humidity - decrease of humidity will decrease the drying duration
- Wind velocity - Sometimes people put a fan near the clothes when drying them indoors
- Direct sun - usually only the external line will be exposed to direct sun, so usually people put the thickest clothes on the most external line.
- Cloth thickness
Drying laundry in freezing conditions
North American legal controversy
In the USA in the late 2000s to mid 2010s, controversy surrounding bans of clothes lines by landlords and Homeowner associations prompted many state governments to pass "right-to-dry" laws allowing their use. In 2009, "the majority of the 60 million people who now live in the roughly 300,000 private communities" were forbidden from using outdoor clothes lines., the states of Florida, Colorado, Hawaii, Arizona, California, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, and Wisconsin had passed laws forbidding bans on clothes lines, while Utah allows local jurisdictions to forbid such bans. At least eight states restrict homeowners' associations from forbidding the installation of solar-energy systems, and lawyers have debated whether or not those laws might apply to clothes lines. British filmmaker, Steven Lake, released a documentary in 2011 titled Drying for Freedom about the clothes-line controversy in the United States. The right-to-dry movement saw little state-level change going into the 2020s, as laundry-drying trends remained seemingly complacent despite legislative changes.
In Canada, the province of Nova Scotia's first NDP government passed An Act to Prevent Prohibitions on the Use of Clotheslines on December 10, 2010 to allow all homeowners in the province to use clotheslines, regardless of restrictive covenants. The province of Ontario lifted bans on clothes lines in 2008. Some affluent Canadian suburban municipalities such as Hampstead, Québec or Outremont, Québec prohibit clotheslines.