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  2. Clothes line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothes_line

    A clothes line, also spelled clothesline, also known as a wash line, is a device for hanging clothes on for the purpose of drying or airing out the articles. It is made of any type of rope , cord, wire, or twine that has been stretched between two points (e.g. two posts), outdoors or indoors, above ground level.

  3. Overhead clothes airer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overhead_Clothes_Airer

    Modern hanging clothes horse with pulley system. An overhead clothes airer, also known variously as a ceiling clothes airer, laundry airer, pulley airer, laundry rack, or laundry pulley, is a ceiling-mounted mechanism to dry clothes. It is also known as, in the North of England, a creel and in Scotland, a pulley.

  4. Hills Hoist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hills_Hoist

    A Hills Hoist is a height-adjustable rotary clothes line, designed to permit the compact hanging of wet clothes so that their maximum area can be exposed for wind drying by rotation. They are considered one of Australia's most recognisable icons , and are used frequently by artists as a metaphor for Australian suburbia in the 1950s and 1960s.

  5. Steve Comisar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Comisar

    As a young man he sold a "solar powered clothes dryer" in national magazines for $49.95. Buyers received a length of clothesline. [3] Comisar has been arrested and convicted of numerous crimes. [2] [4] [5] Comisar was convicted of a variety of frauds in 1983, 1990, 1994 and 1999. All these trials took place in Federal court in Los Angeles. [6]

  6. Clothesline (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clothesline_(disambiguation)

    A clothes line is an apparatus on which laundry is hung to dry, usually outdoors. Clothes line or clothesline may also refer to: Clothesline, a set of moves in professional wrestling; Clothes-Line, an early television documentary on fashion history (1937)

  7. Gilbert Toyne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert_Toyne

    Gilbert Toyne's final patented rotary clothes hoist design was in 1945 "Improvements relating to hydraulic clothes hoists" (Australian Patent No. 128009) [8] Hydraulic clothes hoists used fluid as a means of raising and lowering the clothes line frame. At least seven hydraulic clothes hoists had been patented in Australia prior to Toyne's design.