Just to interrupt this fun conversation for a second:
Lynn, I have gone back to that thread again and again, wanting to contribute to it, but it is so complicated and painful to think about, much less write about, that I just let it go. I appreciated all your posts on the subject.
Back to ironing,
I grew up in sunny SoCal, so drying clothes on the line was not a problem. I remember how it felt to strain my young body and arms up to pin and unpin all the clothes. I remember the sheets most, all white, blowing in the wind, and I remember the smell of the clothes and the grass and the flowers in our yard, and I would usually do the chore barefoot, feeling the grass between my toes. It is a very pleasant memory.
Not that I didn't complain about it.
I was very happy when we graduated from these:
to these:
We also used the "T" shaped clothesline poles for climbing and swinging.
I used to have to iron my P.E. suit - a white cotton short sleeved shirt with snaps down the front and white shorts. It was a rather stiff fabric, and the snaps were a royal pain.
My mom also had a sprinkle bottle that I used. This was before irons came with steam. I still have the bottle - it is very politically incorrect, but then those were politically incorrect times. It is one of my treasures, a vivid reminder of my mom in good times. I found a picture of it on a collectibles website (I hope I'm not offending anyone by posting it):
After years of ironing this way, I know that sprinkling or spritzing water on the fabric makes wrinkles come out.
I had my ironing board set up with my iron on it, plugged in, ready to go, for most of my adult life. I ironed my dresses and slips for work, shirts, t-shirts, ex-hubbies shirts, all kinds of things, but NOT sheets. I always had to iron my dresses and pants because after a day of wearing them, they were always wrinkled, mainly from sitting.
I haven't worked for a few years, things have changed, and I haven't ironed for a long time.
It's nice how some of these threads can bring back some of these memories you didn't realize were there, tucked somewhere deep in your brain.