no because the air freezes the water when its cold but if its sunny and hot it evaporates the water
ice...dry ice...
Have it professionally cleaned. Or if you live in a very dry, windy place, just bring it outside and rinse it off.
You'd better do it in the laundry. We can't do well with it only by ourselves.
laundry man?laundry cleaner?dry cleaner?not sure too
The air around the beaker is cooled by the intense cold of the dry ice, causing water vapor in the air to condense and freeze on the surface of the beaker. This results in the formation of ice on the outside of the beaker.
If it is a blanket then you put it in the washing machine. You use cold water and wool laundry detergent. An alternative is to get it dry cleaned.
The word laundry has two syllables. Laun-dry.
Any weather without percipitation (no rain or snow) is fine for drying laundry outside, summer or winter. The best weather is warm, breezy (not windy) weather.
A good rule of thumb if you know nothing about laundry is to wash everything in cold water with color-safe detergent (No bleach!) and hang dry all the clothes -- you can't shrink anything or mess up the colors that way.
Tile is better for 'wet' areas (kitchen, bathroom, laundry, entranceway) but carpet is better for 'dry' areas (dining room, lounge/living room, bedrooms, hallways).
cheaper to do at home in todays society.
This expression makes no sense to me. The way that people would see your laundry airing would be if you hung them out on a clothesline; but you wouldn't put your dirty laundry out to dry, that makes no sense, the only laundry out to dry would be what you just washed--which should be reasonably clean.