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  • Water In Your Iron or A Spray Bottle

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    Old 03-21-2015, 04:41 AM
      #41  
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    After reading previous threads about this issue, I was curious about what my favorite experts do when they iron. So as I watched Eleanor, Jenny, and Nancy, I paid attention to the iron they used and whether they used steam or not. Also, took a BOM class on Craftsy and when the ironing was done, paid attention. So, methods vary. Find what works for you and your iron.
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    Old 03-21-2015, 05:29 AM
      #42  
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    Most of the time the reason for not using the water in the iron, is because it builds up gunk in the iron. With good irons costing so much now, people want to be able to keep them as long as they can. Some areas in this country have very HARD (lots of minerals and sediment in the tap water). I can remember growing up if my mom didn't have bottled water for the iron, then she would use tap water in a coke bottle with a sprinkle top. Also a lot of people forget to remove the water from the iron after using it. This is also hard on your iron.
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    Old 03-21-2015, 05:30 AM
      #43  
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    I am going to try the spray bottle because I never seem ti have good control over the steam.
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    Old 03-21-2015, 06:13 AM
      #44  
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    I have a Reliable which I believe has to have steam, as it has a built in boiler. I use distilled water and haven't had any problems with leakage or spitting. I use a spray bottle for creases sometimes, and for starching.
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    Old 03-21-2015, 06:45 AM
      #45  
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    I seem to have problems with irons the last 5 years. I don't think they make them to last like they used to. Anyways I have went through so many irons that I decided about a month ago when I needed a new iron I was going to bite the bullet & buy an expensive one that I have seen many of the celebrities use. So I started looking different places online for them & they had so many bad reviews I didn't buy one. I was surprised! I ended up buying a cheaper one ( $35.00 )& so far I love it. We'll see what it does in time
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    Old 03-21-2015, 07:25 AM
      #46  
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    I use two irons - my Walmart one with steam (water in it) - and then another the Rowenta dry and it is heavy! Depends on my project. I also have StaFlo starch 50/50 in a spray bottle and a little plain water spray bottle. I don't clean my iron any more (vinegar) - I lost two irons right after I did it, don't know if I shocked them by cleaning, they had never experienced cleaning before :-) but after losing 2 of them, I don't do that any more. And oh, yes - I have dropped my share of irons, and one got knocked off when the pooch was chasing the cat. I generally buy the less expensive ones at Walmart but did spring for a Rowenta which leaks, that's my dry iron. I also got a T-Fal from a thrift store - love it - but you put water in that thing and the glorious steam keeps it forever thirsty. :-)

    Love discussions like this, they are fun.

    Mary

    Last edited by Marysewfun; 03-21-2015 at 07:27 AM. Reason: correct mid-spelling
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    Old 03-21-2015, 07:34 AM
      #47  
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    I listened to Ricky Tims and for 2 years I only used a dry Rowenta iron. However, sometimes I would iron the
    fabric and when I picked it up to fold it, it didn't look crisp or as if it had been ironed at all. If I were careful
    and put the iron in place for 5 seconds then it was fine. I felt like I would develop varicose veins before I
    finished ironing. My husband ironed his chinos and left water in the iron. When I next went to iron, I had
    steam and it was miraculous- the fabrics emerged crisp and well-ironed.
    Also I would just like to plug Best Press starch alternative. I used the unscented and buy it in gallon sizes
    and refill the original 16oz spray bottle that I bought to test it - never a white spot on the fabric and
    perfect crispness, as if I hadn't prewashed and Retayned all my fabric.
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    Old 03-21-2015, 07:40 AM
      #48  
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    I have a Black & Decker Classic iron, and I use water in it. I also have Magic Sizing on hand. And Best Press use on occasion. My iron lasts over 10 years, has a bit of weight to it too. Works for me.

    I'd love to know where I can find a dry iron-like Suesew mentioned. Have looked, but not found one. Would be fun to try.
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    Old 03-21-2015, 07:54 AM
      #49  
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    Well, after knocking my iron over twice recently and getting it all over the carpet, it's spray bottle from now on.
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    Old 03-21-2015, 08:06 AM
      #50  
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    I have one iron with water for clothes ironing and pressing of large backing pieces. Then I have one dry iron for applique and travel. The benefit to keeping a dry iron is it won't leak and possibly live longer. With a spray bottle you can direct the spray where you need it.
    MadQuilter is offline  
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