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Cold and rain are enemies of some daily tasks, such as dry clothes after taking them out of the washing machine.
One option, in addition to the dryer, is to hang clothes on chairs or doors, but the house ends up becoming something similar to a market. Definitely, the most used alternative To remove moisture from recently washed clothes, a portable clothesline is used, which, in many cases, ends up taking up part of the room during the drying process.
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However, blogger Jen, known as Cleanwithjen, revealed her trick to dry clothes quickly indoors rainy days. The influencer, who has a Tik Tok channel with more than a million subscribers where she shares cleaning tricks, published a video in which she explains how to use a sheet to make clothes lose moisture.
As Jen explains, clothes must be hung on the portable clothesline in the usual way and place this next to a radiator. next, everything is covered with a sheet or a dry quilt, so that it covers both the clothes and the heater, like a tent. This way, hot air circulates between the clothes and they dry in less time.
Trick for drying clothes @cleanwithjen! Now that the wet weather has arrived, here's a little trick to dry your clothes quickly if you're using a regular clothesline! #cleanwithjen #laundryhack #laundrytips #sweaterweather #tidytok ♬ I Ain't Worried – Acoustic – OneRepublic
For the comments and “likes” that the video received, this tiktoker trick works, as some claim that their clothes dried in a short time. “I only had one night for half an hour or so, but I made the most of it”, “it works like magic”, “I did this last week, my son's big and heavy sweatshirt dried in a short time”, assured his followers.
Although, The video also allowed many to show their economic problems to turn on the heating this winter due to high electricity prices. “Great idea, but who can afford to turn on the heating, not me?”, “Are you daring to assume I can afford to turn on the heat?”, “until it shakes aggressively, I will not turn on the heating this winter. Instead, I bought a bunch of thick blankets,” were some of the comments about energy problems.
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And it is that the rise in prices is making families control their spending to the millimeter. In fact, according to AXA Partners' 'Dissection of Inflation in Spain' study, 71% of Spaniards expressed concern about not being able to pay their electricity bill, so 79% have determined that they will use less heat.