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Wire coat hangers.

(30 Posts)
Usedtobeblonde Mon 14-Jul-25 13:12:54

This morning one of my wash handbasins was emptying very slowly.
I tried the plunger to little effect so looked for what I have always fallen back on… a wire coat hanger.
Could I find one, of course not and I couldn’t remember the last time I saw one.
They came into the house holding dry cleaning back in the day, then I wondered when I last had anything dry cleaned.
It is many many years since my late H wore suits and all my clothes now can be laundered, even my coats as I tend to wear very informal ones.
Whatever would Blue Peter do now with no wire hangers to twist into Christmas wreaths or advent calendar thingys.
Does dry cleaning still use them or has technology found something better but still cheap and disposable?

FranP Tue 15-Jul-25 18:32:08

Ask at your charity shop.

You can now actually buy flexible prodder that you push down and twist.

You can also buy a chemical gunk that dissolves grease and hair

WithNobsOnIt Tue 15-Jul-25 18:31:07

Oreo

I hate them, they intermingle and breed in the wardrobe🤬

Coathanger incest?

You can also get some nasty hand and finger scratches and tiny cuts off them. If you try to pull the them out of the wardrobe.

Vicious little louts🩹🗡️🐊🆘👎

Beware you have been warned!

poppysmum Tue 15-Jul-25 16:39:03

Wire and wooden coat hangers seem to be as rare as hens teeth. mind with wire ones they had a habit of bending if the clothing was heavy

Flossie121 Tue 15-Jul-25 16:23:23

I always use a paperclip, straightene out a bit but leaving a hook at one end!

OldEnough2noBetter Tue 15-Jul-25 14:39:23

Magenta8

The last time I had dry cleaning done the clothes came back on flimsy plastic hangers.sad

Incidentally, I always think of "Mommie Dearest" when I see the the wire coat hangers. Does anybody else?

NO… WIRE… HANGERS!!!!
(Beats child with said item). I do not advocate the Joan Crawford School of Child Rearing shock

Allira Tue 15-Jul-25 14:27:40

AuntieE

Magenta8

Message to all wire coat hanger lovers:- Slip an old sock over one side of a coat hanger and use it to dust those hard to reach places.smile

Don't need to. My black cat dusts those places for me and come out covered in dust and spider webs. I believe she must have been a housemaid in a previous incarnation!

Do you hire her out?

knspol Tue 15-Jul-25 14:10:41

My first thought on reading the heading was Blue Peter Christmas decorations. Others have mentioned this too, just shows how much of an effect this programme had on so many of us.

Magenta8 Tue 15-Jul-25 14:10:09

AuntieE She sounds like the ideal feline companion.

AuntieE Tue 15-Jul-25 14:02:12

Magenta8

Message to all wire coat hanger lovers:- Slip an old sock over one side of a coat hanger and use it to dust those hard to reach places.smile

Don't need to. My black cat dusts those places for me and come out covered in dust and spider webs. I believe she must have been a housemaid in a previous incarnation!

Elegran Mon 14-Jul-25 17:43:35

MayBee70 They see so much "magic" every day in videos and films and TV that some real natural magic doesn't impress them.

Magenta8 Mon 14-Jul-25 17:40:06

Message to all wire coat hanger lovers:- Slip an old sock over one side of a coat hanger and use it to dust those hard to reach places.smile

MayBee70 Mon 14-Jul-25 17:33:28

Elegran

I bet Blue Peter didn't show you how to make dowsing rods out of two wire coathangers and a couple of cases from defunct biros or felt tip pens.

Use snips to cut the coathangers at the places shown by the red lines in the picture, and throw away the pieces with the hooks on, and the dead refills from the biros.

Straighten the short arms of the other two pieces to a right angle, and insert them where the refills would go in the biro cases. They should be a loose fit.

To dowse, hold one biro case in each hand, with the coathanger wire sticking out at the top with the long arm pointing away horizontally from you. It will swing around wildly at the least movement. Adjust the angle you are holding it at so that it is pointing down very slightly while you are standing still, then walk slowly forward, keeping.

The theory is that the horizontal wires will swing in towards each other if you cross running water, electric cables, or (so it is said) whatever it is that you are looking for. In practice they either stay stubbornly parallel, or they swing around with each step for no obvious reason. It may help if you can relax and walk calmly.

I did find that it always twitched more at a certain point in my livingroom (though I did know in advance that two conduits with elecric cables in them crossed in the cellar at that point) and it showed where a buried black plastic water main entered a cottage in the country. Again it was logical place for the water main to enter, so I may have expected it to be there.

It is a good way to get a group of usually sensible adults to behave like schoolchildren.

I’ve got coat hanger dowsing rods. They work really well unlike the ones I actually bought which don’t. I thought my grandchildren would find them interesting but they don’t sad.

GrandmasueUK Mon 14-Jul-25 17:23:30

My OH takes his shirts to be ironed and they always come back on the wire hangers. Every so often he takes a clutch of them back.

windmill1 Mon 14-Jul-25 17:23:17

Ooh, when I've done odd stints volunteering in charity shops I've always been impressed at the gazillions of wire coat-hangers in the stockroom. It's where they go to breed......

Devorgilla Mon 14-Jul-25 17:19:59

My husband found a wire coat hanger very useful for retrieving my mobile which had slid into the pit under the passenger seat of my car.

Lona Mon 14-Jul-25 16:10:50

gringrin

kittylester Mon 14-Jul-25 16:06:42

When i send the ironing out we get quite a few. I always send them back but I will retain one next time. I can rent it out.

Elegran Mon 14-Jul-25 16:04:07

Suzieque66

They sell them in cheap foreign shops or Primark ..

You can buy them in bulk in the net! I was looking for a simple pic of one to draw red cutting marks on for my previous post, and discovered they do still exist.

Elegran Mon 14-Jul-25 16:01:30

I bet Blue Peter didn't show you how to make dowsing rods out of two wire coathangers and a couple of cases from defunct biros or felt tip pens.

Use snips to cut the coathangers at the places shown by the red lines in the picture, and throw away the pieces with the hooks on, and the dead refills from the biros.

Straighten the short arms of the other two pieces to a right angle, and insert them where the refills would go in the biro cases. They should be a loose fit.

To dowse, hold one biro case in each hand, with the coathanger wire sticking out at the top with the long arm pointing away horizontally from you. It will swing around wildly at the least movement. Adjust the angle you are holding it at so that it is pointing down very slightly while you are standing still, then walk slowly forward, keeping.

The theory is that the horizontal wires will swing in towards each other if you cross running water, electric cables, or (so it is said) whatever it is that you are looking for. In practice they either stay stubbornly parallel, or they swing around with each step for no obvious reason. It may help if you can relax and walk calmly.

I did find that it always twitched more at a certain point in my livingroom (though I did know in advance that two conduits with elecric cables in them crossed in the cellar at that point) and it showed where a buried black plastic water main entered a cottage in the country. Again it was logical place for the water main to enter, so I may have expected it to be there.

It is a good way to get a group of usually sensible adults to behave like schoolchildren.

Allira Mon 14-Jul-25 15:28:14

I haven't seen one for years! Thank goodness.

Whatever would Blue Peter do now with no wire hangers to twist into Christmas wreaths
As you mentioned the 'C' word first, usedtobeblonde, I have used these as the base for a Christmas wreath:

I don't know if it would work for unblocking sinks, though!

AuntieE Mon 14-Jul-25 14:34:05

In Denmark and in Germany dry cleaners still use wire coat hangers, but I don't know about the UK, as I moved away in 1970.

I have straightened one out to hook things up with, when they fall down behind radiators, used another cut into two to enable an angel in a nativity scene (figures not children!) to float in mid-air, and made the kind of standing ruff associated with Elizabeth Tudor with the help of another.

You really cannot do without them, can you?

Hurry and find a dress that has to be dry-cleaned!

Oreo Mon 14-Jul-25 14:28:59

I hate them, they intermingle and breed in the wardrobe🤬

Suzieque66 Mon 14-Jul-25 14:27:44

They sell them in cheap foreign shops or Primark ..

Magenta8 Mon 14-Jul-25 14:04:11

The last time I had dry cleaning done the clothes came back on flimsy plastic hangers.sad

Incidentally, I always think of "Mommie Dearest" when I see the the wire coat hangers. Does anybody else?

Usedtobeblonde Mon 14-Jul-25 13:58:45

Yes Thankyou Ashcombe I did.
I went into the shed and found a roll of wire of some sort hanging up.
I have no idea what it’s use is but it was very flexible and got some very disgusting gunk out, I am quite embarrassed but however you can’t see it so….😉