We’ve had rope on here before but it would always get loose and fray, I also always wanted to mes with rigging so decided its the perfect excuse to buy a crimper.

Drilled holes into the pipes to put the eyelets. Got two cables up for now, at least the hard part is done, running the cable and crimping isn’t so bad. The drilling and stuff was the hard part

  • tomiant@piefed.social
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    7 hours ago

    Hey everyone, when drying your clothes, especially shirts and tshirts and hoodies whatnot, hang them to dry on hangers! You avoid silly creases mid way up the shirts, and the wetness stretches and draws the fabric a little so they straighten out better.

    I take clothes drying seriously, this is the proper way.

      • ToastedRavioli@midwest.social
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        5 hours ago

        Avoiding creases on clothes using a dryer is super easy. All it requires is taking them out as soon as they are dry, while still hot, and then hanging them up immediately after that.

        If you let them sit in the dryer too long or put them in a drawer they will have creases

    • xylol@leminal.spaceOP
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      7 hours ago

      I was wondering about that, normally my wife makes me hang her shirts from the very bottom hanging upside down for dear life to avoid that. But then I was thinking if there are hangers with like a carabiner top that can lock onto the cable so the wind doesn’t spin them off

  • grue@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    My house had a clothesline in the backyard at one point, but by the time I bought it all that was left were a couple of rusted, broken-off pole bottoms embedded in surprisingly deep concrete. I managed to dig one up, but the other is still a tripping hazard in my lawn. 😕

    • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      If you want to have one and you’re looking for a project, this is doable.

      You could try to saw off the part of the pole bottom that’s above ground, then see if the core of the pole was also filled with concrete.

      If not, just get a pole with a narrow enough diameter to fit in the hollow.

      If so, you can coat the embedded portion in a rust accelerator (you can get ostensibly nontoxic commercial ones, but you can also use brine, hydrogen peroxide, or a strong white vinegar solution- just make sure to avoid getting any of those near plant life you want to keep) every night for a week or two, irrigating it (again, watching out for plants or portions of earth that might be exposed to runoff- to be entirely honest, I’d probably use my waterpik for some pressure without much volume of water and line the block with rags to avoid soil contamination, but that’s probably just because I have a waterpik) and scrubbing the exposed edge with a wire brush every morning. Once enough of the old pole is worn away, you can fit a new one in the hole.

      This all seems like a lot of work, but so does manually digging up a concrete block, lol

  • snoons@lemmy.ca
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    13 hours ago

    I wish I had one of those, but currently I have only a clothes drying rack that is essentially a clothes storage rack.

  • spicy pancake@lemmy.zip
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    14 hours ago

    a crimper can also be used to make DIY cable exercise equipment!

    also, you may want to set up impending precipitation and/or extreme wind alerts for your phone :)

    • xylol@leminal.spaceOP
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      14 hours ago

      Haha I’m not sure I’d trust my crimps just yet for heavy lifting, or this cheap amazon cable.

      Yeah like today was sunny but by the time I finished it was overcast, very bizarre. We are generally sunny most of the year so its only the wind. Another thing I bought with this stuff was some nice metal clothes pins so hopefully they are much better than what I’ve used in the past

      • idiomaddict@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        nice metal clothes pins

        My mental alarm is going off, but maybe unnecessarily. Please make sure they’re sealed and regularly check that there are no chips in the coating, because any iron in them is going to rust when regularly exposed to brief periods of moisture and leave stains on your laundry. If they’re coated in aluminum, they should be fine. If they’re entirely aluminum, I’d worry about their strength for things like duvets, but for regular clothing and linens in mild wind, they should be fine.

  • lettruthout@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    We still do our smalls in the dryer but everything else has been going out on the line - for years. Clothes have been lasting longer and it has kept us more aware of our weather.