Clothes iron
A clothes iron (also flatiron or smoothing iron) has a handle and a flat triangle shaped surface. Electricity makes the flat surface hot. A hot iron is rubbed on clothes to make them flat and smooth. This is called ironing. The handle does not get hot because that is where it is held. They are named clothes irons because they used to be made out of the metal iron.
Cloth is made from lots of small strings. When people wear clothes or move other things made from cloth, the little strings might bend and make lumps. Because the iron is heavy and hot when it is turned on, the little strings stretch and go flat when the iron is put on top. Different kinds of cloth need to be ironed in different ways. If the iron is too hot then the cloth might get broken or burn. If the iron is too cold then the strings might stay lumpy and not go flat. Sometimes people use water with an iron, which makes steam.[1] [2] This can make it easier to iron clothes because the small strings get soft. Some cloth does not need to be ironed because the strings always stays flat.
Some people think wearing clothes that have been ironed shows they are not lazy. Other people think that not ironing clothes can make them look nicer.[3]
Clothes Iron Media
Charcoal iron
- Minalinpampangajf2520 04.JPG
Box iron (Minalin, Pampanga, Philippines Museum).
- Flat-iron-stove 2.jpg
Flat-iron-stove.
- Tranby house 21 gnangarra.jpg
Typical English flat irons of the 1800s (Collection Tranby House, Australia). The shape was used by Victorian antiquarians to describe a style of medieval shield, termed by analogy heater shield.
Iron collection
- Morphy richards iron 1950.JPG
A 1950s Morphy Richards electric iron with original box
- Walton electric iron.jpg
A Walton electric iron with temperature control dial.
- The clothes iron museum in Pereslavl-Zaleski.jpg
Clothes iron museum in Pereslavl, Russia
- Stoomstrijkijzer.JPG
Ironing center with the separate tank visible
References
- ↑ "Steam irons essentials".
- ↑ "Best clothes irons 2024". Archived from the original on 2024-05-18. Retrieved 2021-11-13.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ↑ Ferrier, Morwenna (2015-12-02). "Creasing up: is ironing a thing of the past?" (in en-GB). The Guardian. . https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2015/dec/02/creasing-up-is-ironing-a-thing-of-the-past. Retrieved 2019-08-19.