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  • SheriH
    SheriH Member Posts: 785
    edited May 2007

    Military uniforms are pretty tough to iron, aren't they? I mean, they are particular about them, I think.

  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited May 2007
    Oh, Oh, I have a green stamp ironing board, too!! got it the summer I graduated from nursing school--1964! I iron nothing--fluff in the dryer or it goes to the cleaners.(I try to buy little that needs ironing)

    Dh thought he'd get his shirts ironed when we married, I did iron my uniforms. I told him he'd been sending his shrits to the laundry for X number of years and he could just continue doing so, it wasn't in the marriage vows so nothing had changed!
    My son does iron his own shirts, I'm amazed. And my daughter learned to iron in college.
  • ADK
    ADK Member Posts: 2,259
    edited May 2007
    My mother had my sister & I start ironing when we were pretty young. I always iron my clothes unless they are suits that just came back from the cleaners. I have been wearing a lot of suits lately. My company is being taken over by a company that has business casual all the time (we only do it on Fridays). I guess I will be ironing a lot more.
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited May 2007
    Anne: I want business casual! Darn it all. I have to look professional and now I have to wear a lab coat. Hmmmm - will I have to iron that? Oh I hope not. Off to the cleaners with it.

    And whatever happened to green stamps. It sure was fun collecting them. Guess it really is showing my age.

    image
  • ADK
    ADK Member Posts: 2,259
    edited May 2007
    I remember green stamps, too. It was my Mom and Grandmother who collected them. I guess they have morphed into the cards that get you special discounts at the supermarket.

    Business casual isn't all it's cracked up to be. I worked for a company for two years that had business casual all the time. You really have to get a special set of clothes - you can't wear jeans, which is what everyone wears on the weekends. You also can't wear shorts or skorts or sandals, so what you end up wearing are khakis and casual shoes all the time and it becomes like a uniform. The guys are always in khakis and polo shirts. They might as well wear suits. I like dressing up most of the time. I was glad when I went to work for this company for the dress code.

    As far as that lab coat goes, don't most facilities that require that have their own laundry service?
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited May 2007
    Well, Im just wondering why weeds grow so much easier than flowers. And why are they so hard to pull out.

    Yep, you guessed it, thats what I have been doing all day. Pulling out weeds and dandelions.

    Nicki
  • LuAnnH
    LuAnnH Member Posts: 8,847
    edited May 2007
    Military uniforms are VERY hard!!!! And weeds, UGH! Don't get me started!

    So tell me, whey does that darling adorable child turn into an unruley teenager who knows everything overnight?

    LuAnn
  • BMD
    BMD Member Posts: 1,492
    edited May 2007

    To remind you of what you did to your parents.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited May 2007
    Its like that old saying!

    "When I was 18 I knew more than my parents. When I turned 21 I was surpized at how much they learned."

    Nicki
  • SheriH
    SheriH Member Posts: 785
    edited May 2007
    My 20 year old hasn't figured that out quite yet. Today he was going off on why our country should have a 3 party political system instead of 2. He thinks it should just happen, he doesn't get the whole "free will" thing. I told him he will change his opinions someday when he figures out he doesn't have all the answers.

    Nicki, I have always loved that quote.
  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited May 2007
    I ruined an iron in college making grilled cheese with it...it was late....we were really hungry...sounded like a good ideas at the time

    Deb C
  • Jaybird627
    Jaybird627 Member Posts: 2,144
    edited May 2007
    Quote:

    Does anyone else iron their jeans? My friends tell me that there is something wrong with me because I do.




    I think it might be an "east coast" thing, like calling a purse a pocketbook or all jeans are referred to as dungarees. JMO (I've spent a LOT of time in NY and NJ...)

    Jaybird
  • Jaybird627
    Jaybird627 Member Posts: 2,144
    edited May 2007
    Quote:

    Well, Im just wondering why weeds grow so much easier than flowers. And why are they so hard to pull out.

    Yep, you guessed it, thats what I have been doing all day. Pulling out weeds and dandelions.

    Nicki




    OMG!!! I absolutely hate ground ivy (aka Creeping Charlie) which seems to be taking over my entire lawn!!! Well, less grass to mow that way I suppose.....

    I for one am HAPPY for the dry spell we're having here in Chicagoland. I'm on well water and can water to my heart's consent if I want to (and I do!)!

    Jaybird, about to plant my vegetable garden.....
  • Jaybird627
    Jaybird627 Member Posts: 2,144
    edited May 2007
    Quote:

    I ruined an iron in college making grilled cheese with it...it was late....we were really hungry...sounded like a good ideas at the time

    Deb C




    Deb,

    Were you at least drunk or stoned??? If not, then it tryly WAS a BAD idea.....

    Jaybird
  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited May 2007
    Hmmmmm...I'll take the 5th Jaybird....but I will say we had a wicked case of the munchies going on And, if I remember correctly, the grilled cheese was really good

    Deb C
  • jasmine
    jasmine Member Posts: 1,286
    edited May 2008

    Deb...I used to make grilled cheese at college with an iron too. Did you use tin foil first? Also used to roast marshmallows with a candle, and cooked spaghetti and macaroni and cheese in a popcorn maker and hotpot.

  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited May 2007
    We cooked TONS of stuff pre microwave. The tin foil would have saved the iron...to bad I didn't think of it We made everything from hot dogs, mac a cheese and tuna noodle casarole in the hot pot. We fried eggs one time in the bottom of a popcorn popper. We were nothing if not creative.....

    Deb C
  • djatlake
    djatlake Member Posts: 128
    edited May 2007

    I used to iron my hair in the 70's! Haven't used one for much else since.

  • gwenn
    gwenn Member Posts: 106
    edited May 2007

    I never knew there were so many uses for an iron.

  • ADK
    ADK Member Posts: 2,259
    edited May 2007

    What else have people used their iron for? We have cooking and hair care (as well as pressing clothes). Are there any other uses?

  • djatlake
    djatlake Member Posts: 128
    edited May 2007

    I think some crafts/art projects use the iron (on very low temp) to melt things like crayons.

  • SheriH
    SheriH Member Posts: 785
    edited May 2007
    I've used mine for craft project that have little beads that you put on a frame and then the heat from the iron melts them together in to pretty patterns.

    Jasmine, I'm so glad to see you here!
  • jasmine
    jasmine Member Posts: 1,286
    edited May 2008
  • ADK
    ADK Member Posts: 2,259
    edited May 2007

    I guess the iron is way more versitile than we thought. So many of my friends don't even own one. They don't know what they are missing.

  • SheriH
    SheriH Member Posts: 785
    edited May 2007
    I got an iron for Christmas my senior year of high school and it last me forever! I think we finally bought a new one about 5 years ago. I guess that shows how often we use it.

    When I was in college we lived on popcorn and anything we could make with our hot pot. We weren't allowed to use them in our rooms because the wiring was really old in the building, so we had to plug them in in the hallway. Those were the good old days. We just moved our dd home for the summer and she had so much stuff, microwave, tv, etc. At least her roomie had the refrigerator. We would put stuff on the window sill to keep it cold in the winter.
  • LuAnnH
    LuAnnH Member Posts: 8,847
    edited May 2007
    ahh. the hotpot and popcorn makers, such memories. My college campus was in the mountains of PA, we kept the trays from the cafeteria and used them to slide down the ski slopes. Of course that is not a sober activity! LOL

    LuAnn
  • BMD
    BMD Member Posts: 1,492
    edited May 2007
    I think my mom still uses the same iron she has had for over 40 years. The same board too. She might even have that sprinkle bottle she used to use.

    I know her pressure cooker is over 50 years old and she uses it almost every week-end. I wouldn't even know how to use one. I would probably blow a hole through my ceiling if I tried one. I can still remember the sound of that thing rattling away on the stove.
  • SheriH
    SheriH Member Posts: 785
    edited May 2007
    I guess we ran out of things to say about irons. Speaking of pressure cookers, my mom used one we I was a kid and she would always be freaked out if we slammed a door or were running through the kitchen, so I've always been scared of them. She bought a small one from Walmart a couple of weeks ago, and it just didn't work the way she remembered.

    Personally, I love my crock pot. I had the same one since I was married 22 years ago and kept wanting a new one with a removable crock, but it would never break. Finally, my mom just went and bought me a new one for Christmas. Yeah!!!
  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited May 2007

    I've always been afraid of pressure cookers too. Never had one. Crock pots I love! Have you seen the liners for them? Just throw them away--no cleaning! (ok, only a little cleaning, no scrubbing)

  • ADK
    ADK Member Posts: 2,259
    edited May 2007
    My mom used her pressure cooker almost every Sunday for the Sunday dinner. When I got married 21 years ago, she gave us one. I have never used it. DH wanted to used it to cook rice, but he couldn't figure out how. I don't own a crock pot (see my comments above about my lack of ability to cook). I wonder if I could learn how to use one?

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