Drying is the process of removing moisture.
So it depends. A hot day, not high humidity, preferably breezy and they dry faster outside.
Then again, by the time you take them outside, hang them up, the inside drier might be a bit faster.
air wins. sun will heat the water in the clothes, and yes slightly increase evaporation yet due to the water/surface area ratio air will have the greatest dampness yield.
first squeeze the water from the clothes secondly hang it where the rays of sun are falling directly "your clothes will dry faster" or put the clothes in to the drying machine
eg. Wet clothes on a washing line dry faster on a hot day that on a cold day. On a hot day the clothes will dry faster the warmer it is. The water in the wet clothes evaporate quicker. Heat helps the process of evaporation because heat spreads out particles
Because on got day there is less moisture in air so, the clothes dry faster on a hot day than a cool day.
heat and air
Clothes dry on a sunny day because Sun evaporates water present inside clothes.
They'd usually hang them over a fireplace or just air dry their clothes. Even in the wettest climates, the standard way to dry clothes is on a clothesline, strung either outdoors or indoors.
because the air is more dry not moist and it makes the clothes dry faster.
Clothes dry faster in summer because dry air in summer and no humidity.
first squeeze the water from the clothes secondly hang it where the rays of sun are falling directly "your clothes will dry faster" or put the clothes in to the drying machine
In rainy season clothes do not dry faster because in rainy season there is humidity in air.
keep the air circulating and use febreeze
to make it dry fast
Cool and windy will dry clothes faster. If overcast humidity would be high.
No, no effect on duration.
The sun shines more on them, and the heat from it dries the clothing quicker.
A clothes horse is a piece of equipment that is used for hanging clothes on to dry, usually indoors. It is not really known how the clothes horse got its name but it has been in use since the 1800's.
Hanging the clothes up and allowing air circulation around the clothes will dry them via evaporation. The drier the air and the faster the airflow - the quicker the clothes will dry.