Before you peg anything
- Extra spin if your machine allows - it removes a surprising amount of water.
- Shake items out - seams and folds trap moisture.
On the line
- Leave gaps between items.
- Use hangers for shirts so air reaches both sides.
- Face large flat items into the breeze.
- Turn heavy items halfway through.
The biggest hidden win
A breezy “okay” day can beat a still “nice” day. Airflow clears the moist boundary layer hugging fabric - and that’s what unlocks faster drying.
More guides
Pollen, hay fever and line drying
What the pollen tile means, UK bands by type, and tips for sensitive households.
Can washing dry outside when it’s cold?
Cold-but-dry days, winter drying, and when it’s still worth trying.
What is the best time of day to put washing out?
Morning vs afternoon drying, daylight, temperature, and dew.
Should you bring washing in before sunset?
Evening cooling, rising humidity, dew formation, and why washing can feel damp again.
Does laundry dry better on cloudy days?
Yes sometimes - if wind and humidity are favourable.
How to dry towels and bedding outside properly
Heavy-load tips: spacing, pegging, turning, and avoiding damp patches.
Why washing sometimes smells damp after drying outside
Slow drying, bacteria, detergent residue, and re-wetting.
Rain risk explained: when is it worth chancing the washing line?
Drizzle vs showers, probability, and short drying windows.
Why washing dries faster in wind than in sunshine
Why a breezy cloudy day can beat a still sunny one.
Humidity: the hidden reason washing stays damp
Relative humidity, dew point, and why “muggy” air is poor for drying.
Why does my washing smell like "outside"?
A UK guide to fresh vs musty line-dry smells.
Line-drying in 5°C ("freeze-drying")
What’s realistic near freezing, and tips that help.
Does UV light kill bacteria on clothes?
What sunlight can (and can’t) do for hygiene.
