What is this iron you mention? Seriously, with most clothes, if you don’t leave it bunched up, you don’t get enough wrinkles to warrant heating an iron
The only time I iron a shirt is if the collar points on my flannel shirts are curled in or the pocket flaps are curled. All my other shirts are wash & wear, i.e. essentially wrinkle-free.
Yep…taking from dryer when still just a bit damp, shaking out and hanging works fine for most shirts. 100% cotton will still need a touch from the iron. Strange that flannel shirts seem to do fine though.
Spot on. 100% cotton. Why should it pretend to look like anything other than cotton? I do not want my clothes competing with me on who is less wrinkled.
In the spring and summer I wear Crazy Shirts tee shirts, and the fall and winter I wear sweatshirts from my travels. The only time something needs ironing is when I’m on a cruise and my dress shirt needs it and I just send them to the cleaners.
I only iron our 18th century reenacting clothing but some items – such as his neckcloth or my neckerchief (a yard by a yard square of linen (or if cheap like us – cotton which was too expensive a fabric then to use for same – linen was much less expensive) white fabric which is folded in half to a triangle and worn by women over their other clothing, pinned (straight pin – no safety pins then) closed at the front where the two ends meet.
Templo S.U.D. over 1 year ago
Assuming it’s a shirt made to be wrinkle-free.
in-dubio-pro-rainbow over 1 year ago
I heard pluggers out of the Marvel universe have their own “Iron Man”…
jmolay161 over 1 year ago
Yes, that’s what I do, although I often put shirts through a short wrinkle release cycle in the drier first, after the main dryer cycle.
jmolay161 over 1 year ago
Yes, wrinkle release is the plugger cycle in the drier. Pluggers wish they also had that cycle for their face!
Zykoic over 1 year ago
Only wearT-shirts with long sleeves and a pocket.
Beaker over 1 year ago
All of my clothes are wash and wear regardless of what the label reads.
Geophyzz over 1 year ago
That’s all you need to do with Wind River 100% cotton shirts.
Gandalf over 1 year ago
Yepper!
juicebruce over 1 year ago
Works For Me :-)
Red Phantom over 1 year ago
What is this iron you mention? Seriously, with most clothes, if you don’t leave it bunched up, you don’t get enough wrinkles to warrant heating an iron
pheets over 1 year ago
I fold some right out of the dryer tho the dryer might have to be run a few times… over a few days..
ctolson over 1 year ago
The only time I iron a shirt is if the collar points on my flannel shirts are curled in or the pocket flaps are curled. All my other shirts are wash & wear, i.e. essentially wrinkle-free.
flemmingo over 1 year ago
I don’t iron! Wife does if she wants my t shirts ironed.
PeaceWouldBeNice over 1 year ago
Oh yeah, hangers…
GreenT267 over 1 year ago
Why bother with a hanger when there is a perfectly good exercise bike with handles.
Ichabod Ferguson over 1 year ago
If I ever visit San Diego, if I see a guy who looks like an unmade bed, I’ll know who it is.
Flatlander, purveyor of fine covfefe over 1 year ago
what’s a hanger?
Diane Lee Premium Member over 1 year ago
If I get something out of the dryer and it needs to be ironed, it goes to Good Will.
g04922 over 1 year ago
Yep…taking from dryer when still just a bit damp, shaking out and hanging works fine for most shirts. 100% cotton will still need a touch from the iron. Strange that flannel shirts seem to do fine though.
ladykat over 1 year ago
That’s the only way to iron shirts!
EMGULS79 over 1 year ago
“Irons?” What’s “ironing?” Oh yeah, that thing my grandmother used to do….
anomalous4 over 1 year ago
This Plugger hangs most of her shirts on hangers to dry.
raybarb44 over 1 year ago
Sometimes we put them in the dryer for a minute or so…..
Back to Big Mike over 1 year ago
Is there any other way?
bigdawgjohn over 1 year ago
never has a comic described me more than this one
goboboyd over 1 year ago
I’m a Drip Dry kinda guy.
Robert Maxell Premium Member over 1 year ago
Spot on. 100% cotton. Why should it pretend to look like anything other than cotton? I do not want my clothes competing with me on who is less wrinkled.
macmantoo over 1 year ago
In the spring and summer I wear Crazy Shirts tee shirts, and the fall and winter I wear sweatshirts from my travels. The only time something needs ironing is when I’m on a cruise and my dress shirt needs it and I just send them to the cleaners.
MichaelSFC90 over 1 year ago
Told my Mom that I used gravity for my shirts. Never convinced her.
mafastore over 1 year ago
I only iron our 18th century reenacting clothing but some items – such as his neckcloth or my neckerchief (a yard by a yard square of linen (or if cheap like us – cotton which was too expensive a fabric then to use for same – linen was much less expensive) white fabric which is folded in half to a triangle and worn by women over their other clothing, pinned (straight pin – no safety pins then) closed at the front where the two ends meet.