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Iron and steam. I confess to wearing wrinkled clothing if I am running errands near my house, but otherwise agree that wrinkled clothes look awful. It is sort of depressing as 20 years ago, it was not okay to wear wrinkled clothes outside the house. People seemed to have higher standards.
I find ironing to be soothing as well. I have a fancy hanging steamer, but I like the crispness of ironing better. |
Can you explain the pros of a hand steamer? |
| I iron every couple of weeks. Funny this morning I was thinking about ironing my sheets. I love pressed sheets… |
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I'm in my late 40s, I can't say I've never used an iron (probably the best example is in a hotel room), but this has never been a regular part of my life/routine. And I work in a professional capacity. I guess I've always relied on dry cleaning, or possibly it's that I wear fabrics that don't seem to wrinkle much...
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European hotels don't keep iron and board as a standard in every room. They want people to pay for laundry service. They do keep few sets to be shared and you've to ask for it. If you are staying in a busy hotel with conferences going on, getting one in morning is never guaranteed so plan accordingly. |
| I use both iron and steamer as per needed. My DH gets formal laundered and buys casuals in wrinkle free fabrics. |
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My MIL used to iron her husband's underpants.
I think ironing was mostly "make-work" labor for women at home with little to actually do. In my 50s now, I actually remember my mother having me iron bedsheets because as a 6 year old, I left the iron on the sheet to go out and greet an uncle and we had a nice brown cooked burn on that sheet afterwards. For me, wrinkly clothes get hung straight out of the dryer. Or hang in bathroom during a hot shower will de-wrinkle most items too. I dont iron bedsheets! |