Suchomimus wrote:
and i very rarely get rid of clothes i am hoarder i have clothing from when i was like 11 still
Nesta wrote:
the thing that takes the most energy in the washing machine is heating up the water, so add in a low temperature program (I was most of my clothes on 40*C for 1h 25min), spot-cleaning, airing-out (a lot of things to wash less frequently)... then, what you really are measuring is the "impact" of the washing cycles versus the impact of substituting entire pieces of clothing. if you're not living in a water scarce area, i think most would argue that the impact of clothing production is higher than saving some water.
ooaa interesting i wash all my clothes 30 degrees anyway, but i think i could not afford the electricity bill Suchomimus wrote:
if i washed just whites by themselves i would be washing like two pieces of clothing
i would wash a white alone if it meant it actually stayed white like if it wasn't some item that quality-wise would die in a year anyways if i washed just whites by themselves i would be washing like two pieces of clothing
the thing that takes the most energy in the washing machine is heating up the water, so add in a low temperature program (I was most of my clothes on 40*C for 1h 25min), spot-cleaning, airing-out (a lot of things to wash less frequently)... then, what you really are measuring is the "impact" of the washing cycles versus the impact of substituting entire pieces of clothing. if you're not living in a water scarce area, i think most would argue that the impact of clothing production is higher than saving some water.
and i very rarely get rid of clothes i am hoarder i have clothing from when i was like 11 still



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