The cold is also a thing, your wet clothes freezing on the line doesn't do much, it also get super humid when it gets hot so your clothes will still be damp a you really don't want to fold up damp clothes that have been sitting outside and put them in a drawer
If there is no sun, you can smack them with something so that the ice falls off. That's the trick, if it freezes it's actually good, because the ice will either evaporate, or if for some reason it doesn't you can smack your clothes with something so that it falls off.
If they are damp then I guess you have to iron them...
Which you can only do if you are willing to spend the money to purhase said machine, and are willing to pay the electricity bill that comes with running it lol
Pretty crucial here there's maybe two weeks worth of says per year that leaving your clothes out wouldn't make them worse.
The only reason why it may not work is if it rains, which, I guess is an issue if it rains a lot lol
The cold is also a thing, your wet clothes freezing on the line doesn't do much, it also get super humid when it gets hot so your clothes will still be damp a you really don't want to fold up damp clothes that have been sitting outside and put them in a drawer
Even if the clothes freeze they will still dry when the sun hits them in general. People still use them in very cold climates.
Okay, I'll just leave them out for a week until the sun hopefully emerges for an hour.
If there is no sun, you can smack them with something so that the ice falls off. That's the trick, if it freezes it's actually good, because the ice will either evaporate, or if for some reason it doesn't you can smack your clothes with something so that it falls off.
If they are damp then I guess you have to iron them...
Or I can put it in the machine directly next to my washer and turn a dial and press a button.
Which you can only do if you are willing to spend the money to purhase said machine, and are willing to pay the electricity bill that comes with running it lol
Mine came with the place