My clothes dryer is a green machine; totally bio friendly, emits no pollution and leaves no footprints. It's a rather new model, just about about 4.6 billion years old; unlike some of its contemporaries that have been around longer than we can determine. You're right, my dryer is good ol' Sol, our little star known as the Sun.
My washer is by far a newer model, actually it's one of a kind. It made its presence fairly recently, circa 1943. No warranties, limited or otherwise, came with this model. Still, with proper care and maintenance, it could be expected to last a good 80 to 90 years. You're right, again. My washer is my body with its two arms and hands.
My preference in britches has always been jeans. LG knows what I mean by 'britches'. To some of you new comers, britches is a right proper word for pants. And to be sure, they don't make 'em like they used to.
Years ago, I could buy all the Lee Riders I wanted from JC Penny for $3.99 a pair. They weighed about twice what jeans do, now. They were so stiff, it could be an ordeal just getting them on and off. They seemed to last forever. After about a year's wear, they softened to a most desirable state. They fit like an old glove. So comfy. The well worn jeans were much more preferred over new.
When new, the weight and stiffness of these older jeans required you do some prepping to get them looking good. For years, I ironed them. Then, in the 60s, someone came up with the idea of 'pant stretchers'. They amounted to no more than metal frames over which you slid your laundered and still wet, jeans. Allowed to dry on a clothesline in this manner, the jeans were just about wrinkle free. They never looked as good as when I ironed them, putting a crease in the legs so sharp, they could almost cut you.
Cotton apparel is much different, these days. Because of the way it's treated and manufactured, it hardly ever needs ironing. This holds true for the jeans I buy, today. After hanging them on the line, I smooth them with my hands, removing most all wrinkles. When dry, they look presentable. I can do without the razor sharp crease. These days it would look rather pretentious, anyway.
I washed a few pair of jeans yesterday. With the ground frozen, I said to myself, 'What the heck. I'll hang them on the line (50 feet away), later'. So, I hung them on hooks just outside the back door.
Going out today to move the jeans from the hooks to the line, I was in for a surprise. At midday, it still was freezing. The jeans had not dried a bit and were frozen as stiff as a poker. There'll will be no hand smoothing of these jeans, not just yet.
I brought them into the house, let them thaw, and smoothed them. I carefully folded them and put them aside. Tomorrow, they will be put on the line, frozen ground or no.
My tip: Why put off tomorrow what you can do, today. Chances are, by putting things off, you just might create twice the work for yourself when you do.
I still have some of those jeans I bought 30 years ago, and they still look good. If I had the waistline I had when I bought them, I would be wearing them, today. Yeah, I know. I'm dreaming.
Jeans that will last 5 times longer than those you buy today, and for just $3.99 a pair?
Those were the days.
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Merry Christmas!!
I love reading your posts - brings back memories from my "good old days" also.
I really hope that you are keeping a journal of your posts so that someone (in the future) can enjoy reading them as much as we do.
Thank you, Ma'am
What some call enjoyable reading, others might call boring ramblings. It all depends on what the reader has experienced in their own lives.
ThriftyFun has something to appeal to just about anyone. Guess I'm the one to spark peoples memories, to give them a moment to relive a precious few minutes in yesteryear. We feel better after we do this. I actually think we need it; at least every once in a while.
Take care
Doug
I love this and your posts, too. Such a colourful life far from my own experiences. Pant stretchers, eh? Thats what I call my lower half during the holidays! ;)
'Colourful', maybe. 'Interesting', definitely! Pants weren't the only thing being stretched. When I was a lad in the 50s, everyone had lacy sheers as curtains. They took them down an washed them. Then, they were rinsed in a heavy, homemade flour starch. Next, they were stretched over curtain stretchers to dry. Voila! No laborious ironing.
I remember the Moms doing this in Military Housing growing up 1960s . The starch also acted as a barrier against Pipe/Cigar smoke. Spring cleanings and Autumn Close Ups were Team efforts.
Oh, my gosh!! Makes me older then dirt. I had forgotten all about the 'pant stretchers'. You were right, jeans had more weight to them back to them and lasted forever.
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