I remember my mom putting starch into bed sheet wash and when hung on a line, they came out stiff as board, and fun to make into beds (SSHHH-bed making was not fun). So does any one still use that stuff? I use a spray starch on cotton shirts but that it. No sheets for me
Funny, I was just thinking I might want some starch. I bought a new wide brim hat to keep the sun off my face. The hat is losing some of its stiffness and starting to flop a bit much. I was thinking some starch might do the trick.
Well…I don’t even iron, actually.
Except on a very rare occasion, an item that rarely gets worn but really needs it. Otherwise no.
I used to kind of like the smell of the spray starch when my mother used it,
but it was probably terrible stuff to breathe in the vicinity of.
I even remember the starch my mom used. It was Argo, and came in a yellow box. On washday she would starch everything (except underclothes) and hang them out to dry-yes there were such things as clotheslines in the bad old days. On ironing day you had to use a water sprinkler so you could iron the clothes. It took a long time and a lot of skill to get all the creases straight.
You needed a spade and prybar to get into the clothes later.
I don’t use starch - just another thing to make one stiff. BUT you can do this really NEAT trick with starch…first, pour a pile of corn starch into a bowl. Add water so that it soaks into the starch but not enough to be runny. The starch will form into a semi-hard mass - AND THIS IS WHERE THE FUN REALLY BEGINS (especially if you are really bored)! Press your finger onto the starch…it will slowly descend into the starch. If you pick up the starchy mass it will seem solid but, if you squeeze it, it will MELT thru your fingers and drip back intot he bowl - especially if your hand is still over the bowl. And there you have it - sort of like silly putty for serious people, except without the bouncy part. Cool? You bet! kbr
I use Niagara spray starch for my shirts (when they start to look like they were slept in). Most of my shirts are 100% cotton, so they require a good ironing and stiffening whenever I need to look like I care about what I look like.
Nothing like the feeling of a crisp white shirt to make you feel like a bigwig.
Used to all the time, but gave up using it shortly after I left the Marines. Now I buy non-wrinkle shirts and pants. Just have to remember to hang them up after drying.
Bloomfield only wears starched shirts, dark suits and old-fashioned ties. If it weren’t for his mother’s propensity to starch underwear, he’d still be living at home.
This brings back memories (not Bloo’s underwear-starching mother, but the thread). I don’t think we had a dryer until I was in high school–wash was hung outside or on racks in the basement to dry. And we ironed big time. My older brother’s shirts had to be ironed beautifully–always done with the can of spray starch–so he could look cool. Ah, the ways he tried to bribe me to iron his shirts: He’d trade me dishwashing duties (but conveniently forget when it came time for him to ante up), give me personal property he thought he could live without (I believe he gave me his Monopoly game 2-3 times), and even offer cash when he had it (he’d promise me 50 cents, then only be able to find a quarter when it came time to pay up).
For some period of time in those years we were able to afford to take our clothes to a woman in our little town who did ironing, but that didn’t last long. That was too great a luxury when there was a high school aged daughter in the home with full use of her arms (that would be me)–and an affordable can of starch.
Another one – Have you ever seen these pens they use that are supposed to identify counterfeit bills? They’re iodine, and they detect the starch people use to give counterfeit bills a better feel. If you’re in an area where they use iodine pens, keep a baggie of corn starch handy and whenever you get a wad of 20’s from the bank or ATM, toss them in the corn starch.
There is a name for compounds that behave like cornstarch or cocoa, that behave differently depending on how much physical pressure is applied to them, but I can’t remember the term. Anyone remember this from HS science class?
Non-Newtonian fluids is all I can recall from my fluid dynamics class; acting more like a solid than a liquid when force is applied—GAK!!! That came out of the DEEP reaches of memory— I want my mommy
I remember the first time I ever ran into quick sand, in southern Utah. If you walk quick you can sort of truck right across it. If you stop, all of a sudden it looks…different, and then it liquifies and, ploomp, in you go.
Fortunately it was only about boot-deep. Fun stuff. Sort of reminded me of the cornstarch trick.