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Home: Laundry: Dryer
Dryer lint recapture   (+7, -1)  [vote for, against]
Big lint swabs for workshop

If you save the lint from your dryer, you can roll pieces of it on the ends of skewer sticks for use in your workshop. This also works with belly button lint but only if the whole family contributes.
-- outloud, Oct 21 2009

Very ecological. [+]

Belly button lint on skewers could be dipped in melted earwax to make tiny flambeaux.
-- 8th of 7, Oct 21 2009


Sort of a Hint from Heloise except ewwww.
-- bungston, Oct 21 2009


So you are making Q-Tips?
-- MisterQED, Oct 21 2009


Yes! bigger than average Q-Tips. I have to admit that I multitask with my dryer lint. It has a magnetic quality so after cleaning the filter, on my way back upstairs, I wipe

the basement steps with a wad of the lint. Don't knock it until you try it, lol.
-- outloud, Oct 21 2009


sshhhhh!

If the Swiffer reps find out you're muscling in on their action they'll getcha.
-- 2 fries shy of a happy meal, Oct 21 2009


Dryer lint makes a great fire starter for camping, too.
-- phoenix, Oct 22 2009


// It has a magnedic quality //

Magnetic lint ? What are you putting in that dryer ?
-- 8th of 7, Oct 22 2009


This is so gross I can't even believe we are discussing it. Have you inspected the stuff it collects? It's fur and hair and crap off the animals in our house. Ewww, dusting with the dogs fallen off coat doesn't sound like I'm cleaning anything. Why not just roll everything around on the floor to clean it? (8th, that first comment, on second read, was hysterical.)

Gross. Just Gross.
-- blissmiss, Oct 22 2009


// Why not just roll everything around on the floor to clean it? //

Er .... there's another way ?
-- 8th of 7, Oct 22 2009


You misread, 8th. He clearly said magnedic, not magnetic.
-- pocmloc, Oct 22 2009


Maybe he has a slight cold.
-- 8th of 7, Oct 22 2009


"Gross. Just Gross."
By the time it ends up on your dryer's lint screen it should be pretty clean, no? Maybe not sterile, but what in your house is?
-- phoenix, Oct 22 2009


Magnadick! <leaves to add a superhero post>
-- daseva, Oct 22 2009


Excuse my bushism, lol.
-- outloud, Oct 22 2009


"By the time it ends up on your dryer's lint screen it should be pretty clean, no? Maybe not sterile, but what in your house is?"..... phoenix

I'll bet that it's even cleaner than your dish sponge or toothbrush. Thanks for the suggestion. I'm going to wad the lint into a ball after I use it and reuse it as fire-starter.
-- outloud, Oct 23 2009


Uhm... clean dog hair is still dog hair in my world. Sorry the gross stands. Maybe you could pluck a few eyelashes and swab the sink with them? HUH???
-- blissmiss, Oct 23 2009


Bushy, bushy...did you say BUSHY??? My eyelashes are not bushy, butt head. Now my eyebrows, that's a whole 'nother story.
-- blissmiss, Oct 23 2009


Uhm... clean dog hair is still dog hair in my world. Sorry the gross stands. Maybe you could pluck a few eyelashes and swab the sink with them? HUH??? — blissmiss, Oct 23 2009 [delete]

Ummmmmmm. ! suppose you would not care for my idea for a brillo pad then?
-- outloud, Oct 24 2009


I'm thinking not, but then...
-- blissmiss, Oct 24 2009


// clean dog hair is still dog hair //

Compared to what ? Wool ? Angora ? It's a chitinous fibre obtained from a eukaryote. If it's clean, then it's clean. Some people produce sweaters and pullovers from wool from Old English Sheepdogs and other long-haired breeds (and no animals were harmed in the production, either). Why not ?
-- 8th of 7, Oct 24 2009


ick.
-- blissmiss, Oct 24 2009


I used to put all the lint into a clear plastic bottle. It was quite interesting to see all the different colours from the usual grey- blue to black, green or sometimes red. The layers were fascinating to look at, they had an almost geological aspect to them.
-- DenholmRicshaw, Oct 24 2009



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