QuoteReplyTopic: Drying Clothes On Roof? Posted: July 16 2011 at 3:23am
Would you dry your clothes on a black shingled roof if you had a clothes line available? Would you put your clean wet clothes on black shingled roof to dry? Which method is better and easier? Why doesn't everyone use their roof to dry their clothes?
Edited by Karen Shelton - July 16 2011 at 6:00am
Kirbie
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I don't know. Common sense. Putting your clothes on the tiles will actually cause the tar to stick to the clothes, sinse most black tile roofs use a combination of sand and tar. Suspending your clothes above the tiles should be fine. The only thing? Your clothes will smell like tiles!
If you live in an apartment and need to dry your clothes... half dry them in a dryer on low heat and then buy an indoor clothes hanger from Wal-Mart or department store. I use a fan and circulate the air in a bathroom. Clothes dry good.
But, I am only a man, "Ooh. OoH. OoH."
Guys like me notice!
stevieb
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I'm not too sure the point of this post. Ok, drying your clothes in the fresh air always seems refreshing, but on the roof? I don't get the point. I would think the last place I would want to dry my clothes is on a roof.
I would also be afraid of the tar from the shingles getting on my clothes. I would think that the roof probably isn't the cleanest between acid rain, air pollution, and the dirt that the wind blows up there. If I had to choose between a roof and a clothes line, I would choose a clothes line. That's just my opinion though.
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