No. Hairspray is lacquer. You would be ironing lacquer into your shirt. Don't go there. It would also likely make a huge mess of the bottom of the iron.
No, just use regular clothing starch, or hairspray works well too.
Starch it? Starch makes shirts stiff, like collars and cuffs.
Hot steamy water of course
starch
my mom uses starch on my dads shirts so they are always crisp and clean for work.
No. In the long run, starch will ruin the wrinkle-free blend/chemicals in the shirt. Starch will also ruin the fabric of any shirt over a period of time causing you to throw away the shirt sooner. You should only starch shirts that do not have the "wrinkle free" designation.
I like my shirts with plenty of starch
hairspray was invented by the egyptians in 2000BC belive it or not the first hairspray was not an areosol.
"You could try hairspray or fabric starch." If you have a spray bottle - put in one cup cold water per 2 tsp of corn starch to make homemade starch. Or you can buy it. Hairspray works, but can get gummy. You can also soak in water, wind ribbon on a wood dowel and bake it at 200 degrees until its dry, they let sit until coool. I have wound ribbon on wooden dowels dry, but them in the oven at 200 for 20 min or so, and let cool before removing. They keep their curl.
Yes. When they are having the show on the real hairspray is spraying on them. Also in the stores they sell the same kind of hairspray!=)
Yes, you can. It takes about one tablespoon of corn starch per 2 cups of water. Put it in a spray bottle and shake very well. Use it just as you would store-bought aerosol starch. It may leave a white residue on dark clothing, however.
Nothing causes hairspray