Just got the preview of the digital magazine my tutorial for dehydrating sourdough starter is going to be in and it’s so beautiful!! So much good stuff inside. And I love the cover so much! The magazine comes out next week.
"The clothesline was more than just a place to put wet laundry. It was a spot for my mother to chat and swap recipes with neighbors. So with the fresh morning smell of the rosebushes and lilacs, the wash swayed in the breeze..."
https://t.co/Zpy28ffJ7U
They were so paranoid of germs being on their cash that they literally washed them as soon as they got them and then hung them on the clothesline out back to dry. As a kid,I always found this "money laundering" weird & unnecessary...way ahead of their time
https://t.co/lkTnQZORAb
Hello again Everyone. Here I am with our final five for today.
I do post this painter quite often because I just love his quiet and beautiful pictures. Jim Holland ‘Laundry Day’ Oil on Canvas
@lologalore@endancehall @nesibaeee @baybey1234@bebegirlgi Most hang dry their clothes on clotheslines I believe. I was in Scotland and Ireland a couple summers ago and that’s most of what a saw; not a single drying machine in any house I stayed in lol
Fun fact: the Green Energy Act is often confused with Bill 150, the Green Energy & Green Economy Act. The actual Green Energy Act stops municipalities from banning clotheslines, but not wind turbines, which are regulated under the Environmental Protection Act #onpoli
@cruciverberella Oregon Law states that any restrictions on "solar radiation as a source for heating, cooling or electrical energy" are "void and unenforceable." Clotheslines rely on solar energy as part of Oregon's Solar Rights so the apartment complex has NO RIGHT to deny you the Right-to-Dry