LizzieMaine said:Use a *heavy* iron. It might sound counter-intuitive, but modern lightweight irons are actually more work to use. A vintage heavy iron might seem harder to push around at first but they do a much better job with a lot less repetition.
Mine is a Sunbeam Ironmaster, c. 1935, and it gives me a workout -- it weighs about six pounds -- but I never have to go over and over a piece. It heats up, holds the heat well, and the sheer mass of the thing presses out the wrinkles the first time over. Plus it makes a convenient doorstop when I'm not ironing.
Rachael said:a press cloth is essential, as is a seam roll. I can't bear to think of how many skirts and slacks I ruined by pressing them on an ironing board, only to find those shiny stripes alongside the seams.
Paisley said:I steam my clothes. I have a Whirlpool steamer, but it stopped working, so I just put a hot pot with water in it, set the timer I've got it plugged into, and let it steam away the wrinkles. No rust spatters, no ironed-in wrinkles, no wrinkled parts that are too hard to get to.
My mother hated ironing too. How do you think polyester got to be so popular?