Clotheslines blow through culture again

Clotheslines blow through culture again

ALEXA WELCH EDLUND/TIMES-DISPATCH

Outside her East Broad Street home, Lisa Taranto hangs clothes on a line that she refers to as her “solar dryer.“

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The pros and cons of clotheslines
Which side of the clothesline are you on? Is outdoor drying a blight or a delight? Here are arguments for and against the lowly clothesline:

PROS Line drying costs nothing once you purchase lines, a rack and pins. It's estimated homeowners can save about $100 in energy costs per year by using a clothesline instead of a dryer. Clothes off the line have a clean, fresh scent. Line drying eliminates the need for dryer sheets and fabric softeners, which contain perfumes, dyes and other chemicals that can cause allergic reactions in chemically sensitive individuals. Clothes last longer. Tumbling around in a dryer breaks down fibers and causes clothes to wear much more quickly. Sunlight bleaches and disinfects clothing. Hanging clothes is a way to get moderate exercise while enjoying the fresh air. Failing to regularly clean out vents and lint traps can lead to dryer fires. The Federal Emergency Management Agency reports that dryer fires cause $99 million annually in damage.

CONS Perception that clotheslines devalue a neighborhood. Some zoning regulations and community covenants prohibit exterior clotheslines. Weather and time of day are limiting factors. Freezing temperatures, rain and short days can preclude clothesline drying. It takes more time to hang clothes than it does to pop them in a dryer. There are more effective means of protecting the environment -- hybrid cars, recycling and fluorescent lights. Some experts say line drying produces only a trivial reduction in power usage. People don't want to look at their neighbors' intimate clothing. Clothes hung on balconies can fall off onto other balconies or streets.
-- Julie Young
Online resources: Project Laundry List (laundrylist.org), right2dry.org, linedryit.com, preparedtompkins.org, davis-stirling.com.

The simple, nostalgic act of hanging clothes outside to dry, regaining popularity as an eco-friendly act, has become a full-blown political flap.

On one side of the line, proponents of the right-to-dry movement say clotheslines are a green alternative to dryers, which are second only to refrigerators and air conditioners as the top energy consumers in most homes.

"I call my clothesline my solar dryer," said Lisa Taranto, a green activist and director of the community Tricycle Gardens, who hangs laundry outside her East Broad Street home.

Opponents, however, see clotheslines as flags of poverty that create eyesores and devalue property.

"They're unsightly by most people's standards," said Jeanne Bridgforth, a Realtor with Long & Foster in Richmond. "It gives an atmosphere of decline. You don't sense you're in a well-heeled neighborhood when you see people hanging their laundry out to dry."

Planned communities and condos frequently have covenants that ban or restrict the use of clotheslines. In the Richmond area, restrictions vary -- from all-out prohibition, as in Charles Glen in Henrico County, to restricted use, as in Chesterfield County's venerable Woodlake and Brandermill subdivisions.

"We do allow portable devices [drying racks], just not permanent ones," said Brian Hoyle, community-standards manager for Woodlake, where racks must be brought inside once the laundry is dry.

With more than 300,000 community associations across the country, promoting clothesline use has been an uphill task for Alexander Lee, founder of the nonprofit Project Laundry List, which he started 11 years ago as a Middlebury College student.

"I frankly feel that [calling clotheslines eyesores] is a selffulfilling prophecy and we need to stop talking about it as . . . something that's ugly," Lee said.

The clothesline issue is being wrung out nationwide in legislatures, community associations and online. A group called Right2Dry is urging the Obama family to hang their clothes on the White House lawn to promote line drying.

During the last Virginia General Assembly session, Sen. Linda T. Puller, D-Fairfax, introduced a bill that would have prohibited Northern Virginia community associations from restricting the use of "wind energy drying devices" -- i.e., clotheslines.

The bill, which would have gone into effect next Wednesday, would not have been retroactive but would have applied only to new covenants. It passed the Senate 40-0 but died in the House of Delegates 60-40.

Puller said she hasn't decided if she'll reintroduce the bill next session.

This month, similar legislation became law in Vermont. Clothesline bills are in various stages of debate in about a dozen other states.

Slur aside, the eyesore question is at the core of most opposition.

Lee said he understands the aesthetic mores. "What's uglier -- water lapping at our front doors from global warming or somebody with a drying rack on their deck?" asked Lee, who has a network of clothesline activists across the country.

Bridgforth recently showed a beautifully restored historic property on Church Hill that was listed in the $700,000 price range. "I had such a hard time selling it because the people next door always had laundry hanging from their second-story back porch," she said. "It was just an eyesore." The house went to foreclosure and eventually to auction, Bridgforth thinks, because of the negative appearance around the house.

In Europe, laundry lines are common outside, but the use of electric and gas dryers have diminished their appearance in the U.S. With the green movement, clotheslines are coming back, Bridgforth said.

But homeowners using clotheslines face threatening letters and potential fines from their community associations. Clotheslines also can create tension between neighbors.

How can the issue be resolved?

"Finding a middle ground is going to be pretty darn hard," Bridgforth said.

Residents should consider their neighbors' view when erecting a drying device or maybe do their drying on indoor racks or lines.

"In the old days, wonderful old houses had drying yards that were screened off from public view," said Jennie Dotts, CEO of Old House Authority in Richmond.

Frank Rathbun of the Community Associations Institute said it's important for community associations to periodically review their regulations.

"A rule that made sense 20 years ago may not make sense today," Rathbun has said. "A rule that most residents wanted 15 years ago they may no longer want today. So we urge boards to conduct a periodic and transparent review of their rules. By transparent I mean this should involve the board and the residents in the community."

Margie Langston, who manages several Richmond homeowners' associations for Community Group Inc., oversees neighborhoods that ban clotheslines and others that allow them.

Langston, who calls herself a "passionate environmentalist," wrote a play a few years ago called "Out to Dry" based on an article she read about a community that was up in arms over someone's right to dry clothes outdoors. The play had a staged reading at Richmond's Firehouse Theatre and won a national contest.

"For a prop, I bought an umbrella-style clothesline to use on stage and later installed it in my backyard where I have used it ever since," Langston said. "I really love the simplicity of drying my clothes in the sun.

"I have yet to convince some of my boards of directors that this is a good thing, but I am an advocate of this cause whenever I can get a chance."



Contact Julie Young at (804) 649-6732 or .


Memories of a clothesline

My grandmother's clotheslines bisected a postage-stamp size backyard behind her 1920s bungalow in the shadow of Roanoke's Mill Mountain.

I'm told that I looked forward to laundry days as a child visiting her home. I'd watch her fill a large wicker basket with wet clothes out of the washer in the basement, then follow her outside to "help" hang them.

The first thing she'd do was take a clean cloth and wipe off the lines, walking the entire length back and forth a few times. I'd haul out the metal clothespin bucket and, for some inexplicable reason, sit down in the grass and clip the pins all around the rim like a little army of wooden soldiers.

As she hung sheets, towels and clothes, I'd decide whether to hand her a wooden spring-pin or the unhinged tubular type with the round flat head.

There are stories of housewives who hung their unmentionables on a center line hidden discreetly behind outside rows of sheets and towels. I guess my grandmother lacked clothesline modesty -- she let it all hang out in plain view, even her rather sizable granny panties.

When she was finished, I always ran through the wet clothes to get a few cold slaps on a hot day.

When I was growing up, every home we lived in had a clothesline. My mom still has one. She runs outside when she hears it start to rain and says things under her breath when she discovers a bird has flown over and left a deposit on freshly dried laundry.

When my family visits her, we sleep on sweet, crisp sheets and dry ourselves with slightly rough towels.



Contact Julie Young at (804) 649-6732 or .

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by greta on July 13, 2009 at 3:00 pm

I too remember the days when smoking cigarettes was considered very fashionable and sophisticated.
Some of us were already practicing “living lightly on our earth” in both a personal and professional way.
And it certainly was not considered sophisticated or fashionable. It certainly was not profitable.
However, many of us put our money where our mouths were and took those first “steps in the right direction” towards preserving the planet for future generations.
We wrote the program.
Pretentions cloaked in environmentalism seem to be the order of the day.
Whether or not to hang out laundry is merely a red herring.
If it pleases an individual, they should do so.
And their neighbors have the right to object without being accused of not caring for their children’s and grandchildren’s futures on the planet.
Or of being “snobbish” because they think it is unsightly.
And since when is “affluent” a dirty word?

Flag Comment Posted by janetex on July 13, 2009 at 10:51 am

Most definitely!  I remember when it was “in” to smoke and not to wear seatbelts!  Fortunately we have become more educated about the harmful effects of those practices.

Obviously there is more to living sustainably on our planet than driving a Prius and hanging out laundry, but they are steps in the right direction as people become more educated and enlightened about the benefits of living lightly on our earth.

Flag Comment Posted by greta on July 13, 2009 at 10:12 am

“It is now ‘in’ to want to live sustainably.“
God forbid we should not be “in.“

I remember when it was “in” for women to work two jobs so they could have a dryer!

I think that the definition of “sustainable” life may be very different for the poor. The delicatessen variety of “sustainable”
is not generally on their menu.

The idea that hanging out laundry and using mercury laced light bulbs and driving a Prius is saving the planet is a form of environmental snobbery that unfortunately very “in.“

Flag Comment Posted by janetex on July 12, 2009 at 8:16 pm

“It gives an atmosphere of decline. You don’t sense you’re in a well-heeled neighborhood when you see people hanging their laundry out to dry.“

Oh no, we want more “affluent” homes that have 3 giant gas-guzzling air-polluting SUV’s in the driveway, a nice big water and energy wasting swimming in the backyard and sprinklers watering the lawn 24/7. 

Surprise! that attitude is on it’s way out.  It is now “in” to want to live sustainably - whether you are rich or poor.  Get with the program!

Flag Comment Posted by greta on July 02, 2009 at 2:35 pm

Bully for anyone who cares to hang out their washing on a line.
When i was a kid it was my job to “wring out’ the laundry before it went on the line. This inolved a torture like device that was cemented to a small area in the back yard.
The laundry in the winter time would stand up by itself in a corner because it was frozen. Every single item would have to be ironed because it was frozen and scratchy as the Sunday paper. That included towels and sheets and socks.
If it rained for a few days you were totally out of luck. In the spring it had pollen all over it and the birds were poopers for all seasons.
In summer you had to fight the wasps and bumble bees and the heat.
This falls into the category of resurrecting old fashioned inconvenience and calling it environmentalism.

Flag Comment Posted by xxxx on July 02, 2009 at 2:12 pm

All I can say is I’m glad I don’t live in those neighborhoods that don’t allow it. I wouldn’t want to be considered a snobbish bore who has nothing better to do then stare at my neighbor’s undies.

Flag Comment Posted by janick526 on July 02, 2009 at 2:03 pm

Holy cow Ms. Bridgeforth maybe you should sell houses in my mom’s neihbor hood in New York where the average brownstone 3 family walkup is listed at $900,000 to 1.3 million. Nothing fancy just everyday folks who all have clotheslines in their backyards(I know my mom made me climb the telephone pole to hang her line) What a snob how dare somebody speak ill of how most Americans dried their laundry before we all had dryers. As for the house in Church Hill that could not sell because of the clothsline, I have some oceanfront property for sale in ......... you all know where.

Flag Comment Posted by MamaKin on July 02, 2009 at 1:12 pm

By the way -

dogtired, don’t jinx yourself…..I’m sure Dominon will find a way to charge you.

Flag Comment Posted by MamaKin on July 02, 2009 at 1:11 pm

What kind of nation are we turning into - if someone doesn’t like something, its immediately banned or forced to be removed.

There is nothing wrong with a clothesline - helps with electric bills, etc.. and there is nothing like line-dried clothes.

If you have a problem with the clotheslines or are that bugged by them, just don’t look at them!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Flag Comment Posted by Ellen on June 30, 2009 at 6:56 pm

I’ve been blessed not to have to live in a neighborhood with a clothesline restriction.  In fact, when we were looking at homes for sale, I dreaded the thought of having to live in a development that did not allow a clothesline. I think it is important that a clothesline be unobstrusive, such as located behind the house. We installed a retractable clothesline, though it stays set up all the time.  I love that the article mentions how the grandmother washed the line before hanging anything - that mildew on the line leaves stains!

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