There's no denying that clotheslines are magical wonderful things that reduce our energy bills and leave our clothes smelling summer fresh each and every time we use them. So when we moved downtown from our house in the suburbs, the lack of a backyard had us down in the dumps about not being able to dry our clothes in the fashion we had become quite accustomed to.
After a notepads worth of scribbles, visions of complex systems of levers and pulleys, we finally came to a rather simple conclusion to make it happen. We are lucky enough to have wood posts in our loft to work with, but this would work just fine through drywall and into a stud on opposing walls.
Here's what you need:
In our space because our ceilings are high, we are able to double hang our clothes line. This allows us to dry two full loads of laundry at a time. If you don't have enough space to double hang, all you will need it 1 large screw eye hook instead of 3. Here's a ridiculously crude drawing of what our set up looks like.

We simply hook the carabiner onto an eye hook, thread the rope through the next two hooks and then finally wrap it around the cleat. The whole thing sets up in under a minute and comes down with the same speed.
Never again will we mess with drying racks which never seem to hold enough or truly seem to be wide enough to allow clothes to dry quickly. It's been a great addition and we dry everything except towels on our line now. Those we still head down to the dryer for a little bit of extra fluffing in the dryer!
Maybe you have space to put one in your bathroom? Maybe you have space for one across the top of your kitchen? Where ever it might be, there's ALWAYS room somewhere! We hang our clothes at night and take them down in the morning and unless you knew what you were looking at... you'd never know we have a clothesline ready to go up at a moments notice!
(Photos by Sarahrae)







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That's similar to what I do on my back patio, except I have two clotheslines tied to one eye hook. Each line has a carabiner at each end which I attach to another eye hook at the other end. This way I can choose to use one or two clotheslines. I always hang my clothes to dry since I don't own a dryer. You don't really need one in Phoenix!
But... you can buy something that looks MUCH better than this makeshift setup for relatively little. Just for starters:
http://search.hardwarestore.com/?query=Retractable Clothesline&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_term=retractable%20clothesline&utm_campaign=rkg
I definitely love hang drying my clothing, but I've always done it for free by putting my clothing right on their hangers (plastic or wood only!) and hanging them over the shower rod. If I do it in the evening, they are dry by the time I wake up so my shower isn't tied up when I need to go through my morning routine. Not only that, they are already hung properly and all I have to do is move them from the shower rod to the closet.
I do this for socks and undies too! Each hanger holds two or three pairs of socks!
I have this, which seems much simpler and tidier looking than rope and carabiners. Granted, you'd need two to accomplish the same thing, so $20 instead of $5:
http://www.organize.com/retclot8ft.html
What's wrong with using a dryer? I just don't understand where some of these ideas are coming from. A clothesline in your home? One that you have to go to great lengths to set up? The need to build diagrams and become familiar with pulleys and lines. Really? All of that effort for what exactly? I say throw the clothes in the dryer with a softner sheet and call it a day. If there is some reason why going the dryer route is a bad idea, that's different, but still I couldn't imagine rigging up a clothesline.
@missbynski: Line-drying is usually gentler on your clothing than drying machines. It's also much, much more environmentally friendly.
^"Usually"? Try "almost always." Next time you dry a load of clothes in the dryer, examine the lint trap. All that lint is from your clothes gradually wearing away from being tossed around in a dryer.
I don't tumble-dry clothes unless it's too cold and damp for air-drying, and my clothes have never lasted so long or looked so good.
Hey guys, I just moved to a suburb of seattle. Tips for line drying here?
The walls in my laundry room are close enough together that I was able to put a shower curtain rod in there, so my clothes can go right from the washer to the rod. I also have a retractable clothesline outside.
I would use my dryer less if it weren't for the fact that air dried clothes, towels, etc. come out so stiff. I like the fluffy, comfortable feel from the dryer. Anyone who line dries regularly have any tips for making the former more comfy?
LakeDreamer, I often air-dry my clothes and then throw them in the dryer for 5 minutes to soften/fluff them up.
LakeDreamer- If you are religious about adding a bit of white vinegar to your wash loads it will help soften your clothes for line drying!
LakeDreamer - Tumble towels and sheets for a few (5-10?) minutes after washing and then hang up to finish drying. Makes a huge difference and the vinegar helps too and keeps things smelling fresh (don't worry - your towels won't smell like a salad)
missbynski - Dryers are a HUGE energy hog. All that heat that your dryer gives off is busy doing its little part to heat up the planet. Plus the expense of the energy. Plus it trashes your clothes.
Lizzykewl, you could try setting up a clothesline in your bathroom and then crank up a space heater, shut the door, and let it go for a little while (lights off). I've read that in Scandanavian countries they have special drying rooms for their clothes--few people own dryers there, but because it's so cold, clothes will take a long time to dry on their own.
Thanks for the tips. I use vinegar for all my cleaning, but didn't know about adding it to the wash. But how much?
missbynski- Not only is a line drying better for your clothes, but it's also more economical.
The dryer in my building is just too damn expensive for every single load. If I've got 4 loads to do, forget about it. Line dry most of it, and just dry the sheets and towels in the machine.
In Europe, there are so many ways to dry laundry without electricity. In Ireland, I saw racks on wheels so you can pull the laundry in quickly if it rains. In Amsterdam, they have nifty racks that hang from second-story windows. Someone in Montana is making ceiling-mounted indoor drying racks--my neighbors can't complain, haha. I thnk web address is: www.drynhigh.com
I live in Seattle, recently relocated from Florida, where my line-dry clothes would dry in less than an hour on my little back porch, or a couple of hours hanging from the shower rod. I hand wash tons of things, like sweaters and vintage dresses (or inexpensive dresses too - your target stuff stays so much nicer if you never put it in the dryer) and ten days later, thicker things were still damp. I still won't use a dryer, but will have to learn a new kind of clothing patience, like... guess I won't wear that wool pencil skirt this week.
So I've got a drying rack and a million coat hangers and I'd happily set up a drying line in my apartment-- but there's two problems I keep running into. I have beautiful 1950s hardwood floors (poor pitiful me, right?), and my kitchen and bathroom (linoleum) are microscopic. Where (or how) should I set up my drying rack? I've tried in the tub, so it can just drip into the drain but... my fancy-pants shower set-up drips onto it (not a leak, just water in the shower head line that likes to spurt out in bursts every few hours). My second problem is the dampness-- apparently I missed the part where the for-rent ad mentioned this place was a cave. I can hang my clothes for three days and they'll still be wet! (Not jeans and the like, I mean a t-shirt, or a pair of undies!) Any tips for hardwood floored cave dwellers?
This is great. I'm definitely heading home tonight to see where I could rig something like this up. I've been toying with the idea of an indoor clothesline for a while but gave up on it a few months ago and bought a cheap drying rack from target. Sadly this $14 drying rack did not hold its own against a winter of heavy sweaters and jeans in MN. It crashed and came to a splintery end last week. This post made my day. $5 that is so much better than a rickety, cheap drying rack.
Alysaaria, try buying a rug with a rubber backing (a big bathmat would work well) and hanging clothes to dry over that. The rug will absorb any drips and the rubber will keep it off the flooring. Maybe in the hallway?
We have similar problems drying here in our north facing basements apt in San Francisco. We finally figured out that moving the space heater under the clothes drying rack (the Antonius ceiling mount from Ikea-heart this one!) will not only warm the bedroom but also dry the clothes!
I live in England, where drying your clothes on a rack indoors is very common. We don't even have a dryer, and the weather is very often damp and rainy, so the clothes can't really go outside.
We usually run everything through the spin cycle twice, which helps a lot with removing extra water. We have several little racks that hook over the radiators or doors, a folding drying rack, and I set up a cheap collapsible clothes rail that lives next to another radiator. Most things dry in a day or two, depending on how heavy they are.
So, yes, the house is festooned with drying clothes on a regular basis, but we don't really have a choice. It's easy enough to fold up the racks and put them away if company is coming over.
Mandervince: I live in a small apartment near Seattle, Washington and air dry my clothes on two collapsible t-top ironing boards with the fabric covers removed; some laying flat, most draped over hangers hung around the board's perimeter. High surface/hanging area to floor space ratio. And I didn't need to buy anything I didn't already own. Working well over 2 years now and didn't need to modify the walls (rental).
Clothes coming out of a washer don't drip. For hand washables, roll them up in a towel for 5-15 minutes to blot before drying.
did this exact setup except i placed a turnbuckle at one end as a line tightener.
because mine is a permanent line up by the ceiling, only accessible by ladder, i'm going to go with a pulley system.
If you live in an apartment building, check out the basement for spaces where you can dry clothes. In my building, there are unused storage areas that are basically little corrals of chainlink fence. Perfect for hanging laundry over, and you can stick small things like socks in the holes.
I just hang it on plastic clothes hangars along the length of my bath tub. Since the washer does a fairly good job in squeezing most of the water, there is very little residual dripping. I usually wash once weekly and have ample room for clothes that I have. I only use the clothes dryer for towels and sheets.
here in Portugal the usual is to line-dry clothes (well, there isn't really an immediate translation to line-dry, it is assumed) almost every apartment in Lisbon has a clothing line on the outside, below the window, usually not in the main façade unless in old Lisbon ().
so I guess the resistance to line-dry is mostly cultural and, to a lesser extent, somewhat related to the weather.
Any tips on rigging a similar system in an apartment where you aren't allowed to screw anything into the wall?