How Do Dry Cleaners Clean Clothing

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  • Опубліковано 19 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 999

  • @TodayIFoundOut
    @TodayIFoundOut  6 років тому +25

    Now that you know how dry cleaning works check out this video and find out Who Invented Tequila and What's the Deal with the Worm?:
    ua-cam.com/video/8vgdQgcs42s/v-deo.html

    • @wizbangIWD
      @wizbangIWD 6 років тому

      So in short, dry cleaners take it apart, make it wet (WET) and then put it back together ! Gotcha ! ; )

    • @prepperjonpnw6482
      @prepperjonpnw6482 5 років тому

      Please do a video explaining what a VPN is and why or why not we should use one or not use one.

    • @dennisvdk6079
      @dennisvdk6079 5 років тому

      dim it with the ads, this is to much...

    • @barakoniner1644
      @barakoniner1644 4 роки тому

      Thia doesn't show me shit. Thanks for nothing

  • @reneekittycat
    @reneekittycat 7 років тому +287

    I worked in the dry cleaning industry for 23 years and this was very accurate. Great job.

    • @nickkuttian4143
      @nickkuttian4143 7 років тому +8

      Renee Leighton so can i dry clean my shirt by pouring gas on it

    • @CharlieUlivarri
      @CharlieUlivarri 6 років тому +2

      The big question for me is how do you press out the clothes so well. Do you use a gallon of starch per shirt?

    • @abhinavkhare8081
      @abhinavkhare8081 6 років тому +1

      Ma'am can you tell me how to dryclean the white shirts professionally...while doing the white shirts the results are not satisfactory

    • @asavlogsalltruthrevealed7483
      @asavlogsalltruthrevealed7483 5 років тому +1

      Are u from uk?Ive just bought a paded jacket for my son says dry clean.But ive heard people stil use in machine.From the video ive just watched if dry cleaning is done in machine.Surely wont matter if i put jacket in washing machine

    • @ryanbrundige7238
      @ryanbrundige7238 4 роки тому

      So why are you watching a video on how dry cleaning works

  • @RandomAmerican3000
    @RandomAmerican3000 7 років тому +519

    And here I thought it was called "dry cleaning" because there were no liquids involved. Kind of a let down really.

    • @RicardoSanchez-es5wl
      @RicardoSanchez-es5wl 7 років тому +41

      Random American I agree. It should be called something different such as solvent cleaning or something.

    • @CybershamanX
      @CybershamanX 7 років тому +29

      Because that would make a great advertising campaign: "We get your clothes clean...with SOLVENTS!" heheheheh ;) :P

    • @CologneCarter
      @CologneCarter 7 років тому +31

      Chemists consider only water to be a wet liquid, as far as I remember. That's why it is chemical cleaning in Germany and other European countries. Makes more sense, I think and we don't have to think about whether or not our clothes were dry or wet cleaned.

    • @thomasmacgruber6701
      @thomasmacgruber6701 5 років тому +29

      Having owned a day cleaning service, you would be surprised how many people thought the clothes just went around on the hangers and came back cleaned and pressed. The process is very labor intensive and tedious.

    • @Steve_in_NJ
      @Steve_in_NJ 5 років тому +4

      @@thomasmacgruber6701 I always thought the process was an "ancient Chinese secret" but then all the dry cleaners around my town are run by Koreans so it must be an "ancient Korean secret"??? LOL

  • @Amvndanicole
    @Amvndanicole 7 років тому +1264

    Skip to 5:10 to actually see how dry cleaning works lol

    • @esharenee4186
      @esharenee4186 6 років тому +117

      Thank you girl, because nobody asked the history.

    • @cherokeegotti4903
      @cherokeegotti4903 6 років тому +55

      Thanks because he was talking too damn much

    • @Omerasupreme
      @Omerasupreme 6 років тому +9

      Thank you!!!

    • @lissamak2405
      @lissamak2405 6 років тому +34

      Jesus I wanted to know how it works not the history since the beginning of time. "... it all began in 1322AD....."

    • @Joetrout
      @Joetrout 6 років тому +21

      Thanks i was already gonna stop watching. Who cares how the romans cleaned their clothes

  • @MrVvulf
    @MrVvulf 7 років тому +92

    Michael Faraday is under appreciated. Seriously, his inventions are some of the most important in human history (especially the method of converting mechanical energy to electrical and vice versa), and yet many don't recognize his name.

  • @DATA-EXPUNGED
    @DATA-EXPUNGED 7 років тому +252

    something I've always wondered but always forgot to look up myself, thanks dudes.

  • @EvilPaladin11
    @EvilPaladin11 7 років тому +6

    Suddenly the disclaimers in dry cleaners about missing buttons make sense.
    The extra buttons inside of button up shirts, are now even more genius.

  • @cpufreak101
    @cpufreak101 7 років тому +32

    Once you notice that the green screen makes part of his glasses go invisible when he turns his head enough, you'll never unsee it

  • @sethgrasse9082
    @sethgrasse9082 7 років тому +35

    3:33 *When you realize there's somebody out there whose job is to take pictures of every single dictionary entry.*

  • @bigdaddy2372
    @bigdaddy2372 5 років тому +69

    came to learn how dry cleaning works...
    gave a a fkn history lesson...

  • @MimiKeel
    @MimiKeel 6 років тому +29

    1:46 First African American patent in America.
    5:08 How dry cleaning works.

  • @RolodexEnigma
    @RolodexEnigma 7 років тому +105

    I've gotta say I usually click off during the sponsorship stuff but Simon is so good at talking and being interesting that I actually stay to listen. He should be some kinda salesman or politician or something.

    • @michahermann7869
      @michahermann7869 7 років тому +9

      RolodexEnigma yeah politician would be great. He proves over and over again that he has no fear in digging deep into a topic until he really understands it. And he doesn't fear morning briefings that are long and don't contain images or his name (I'm looking at you, Mr. Drumpf). Furthermore, he's really good at speaking

  • @TechGorilla1987
    @TechGorilla1987 7 років тому +315

    Simon, I think it may be time for you to look in to creating some sound absorbing pads for the room where you make these videos. If you were able to absorb some of the echo you have, it would really enhance your voice which I personally think is excellent for conveying information. This is one mans opinion.

    • @CybershamanX
      @CybershamanX 7 років тому +6

      I once bought a bunch (a...bushel? no...a bail? man...I don't know. heheheh :P ) of pulp paper egg cartons for just such a purpose. I cut the lids off and stapled them to the wall behind the listening position in my room to help deaden the sound reflections when listening to my HiFi audio system. It really made a big difference! :)

    • @hoodyboody
      @hoodyboody 7 років тому +15

      Feel free to unsubscribe and never be bothered by one of his errors again.

    • @Wysiwyg43
      @Wysiwyg43 7 років тому +1

      Chris Pridmore::: BAM! Your comment needs to be followed by "drops mic". (^_^)

    • @hoodyboody
      @hoodyboody 7 років тому +1

      wysiwyg43 I think the original comment I replied to has been deleted, so.. don't think it's for Tech Gorilla.

    • @mikeelmira
      @mikeelmira 4 роки тому

      laser325 he was born and raised in the UK

  • @60secondsuccess39
    @60secondsuccess39 7 років тому +422

    As a fellow video creator, I respect the amount of research that must go into these videos. Believe me, the time spent definitely shows in the end product!

    • @malachicorvin9329
      @malachicorvin9329 7 років тому +10

      60 Second Success 10 minutes on wikipedia

    • @colhingars7019
      @colhingars7019 7 років тому +3

      60 Second Success dad?

    • @briansouth9325
      @briansouth9325 7 років тому +3

      60 Second Success and yet they still get many things wrong

    • @ignignoktthemooninite3679
      @ignignoktthemooninite3679 7 років тому +3

      60 Second Success yeah Simon Whistler is a fraud

    • @Mawsy-rg8gh
      @Mawsy-rg8gh 7 років тому +6

      nute VG video must take hours & hours of research,fact checking & double/cross checking as the number of time Simon has got something wrong compared to the no of vids made is minuscule

  • @nesirsitsir
    @nesirsitsir 7 років тому +155

    The world's most mysterious mystery, mysteriously revealed...

    • @unkleRucker21
      @unkleRucker21 5 років тому +1

      I needed to comment on this😂😂😂😂😭😭😭🤣🤣

  • @cup_check_official
    @cup_check_official 7 років тому +428

    am i the only one who noticed he changed his under shirt from 0:06 to 0:17? My eyes were like theres something wrong O_O

    • @meganeko7248
      @meganeko7248 7 років тому +125

      He dropped them off to the dry cleaners of course

    • @ownerfate
      @ownerfate 7 років тому +10

      cannot be unseen.

    • @ownerfate
      @ownerfate 7 років тому +1

      also... don't most of the videos have some sort of background music...?

    • @maxcorrice9499
      @maxcorrice9499 7 років тому +11

      It changes back later, towards the end

    • @TristanSmith99
      @TristanSmith99 7 років тому +26

      the beginning and end of the video were made separately like most ads

  • @yami7339
    @yami7339 7 років тому +523

    I'm so stupid I didn't realize that DRY cleaning actually meant that the clean it without water.🤦🏾‍♀️

    • @IfYouMeetAWolf
      @IfYouMeetAWolf 7 років тому +48

      In Swedish we call it "Chem-cleaning". Very figuratively too.

    • @bdnugget
      @bdnugget 7 років тому +24

      Wet is a reserved word for water, at least from a chemist's point of view. I use a lot of solvents, like dichloromethane and THF, and we often dry them over stuff like sodium (reacts with water) to make them completely water-free for some moisture sensitive reactions. We call those ' dry solvents' while when it just comes out of the bottle without any treatment they are wet solvents.

    • @CrashKinkaide
      @CrashKinkaide 7 років тому +26

      Seriously, I was well into my LATE 20's before I bothered to ask my cleaner. I literally thought they used caustic powders, brushes, Et. Al.

    • @falcon-eu1wu
      @falcon-eu1wu 7 років тому

      Rip

    • @oppressedindividual5615
      @oppressedindividual5615 7 років тому +1

      MelaninPoppin same 😂

  • @gaboandro21
    @gaboandro21 5 років тому +3

    This video is 45% history lesson, 45% an ad for square space, and 10% what we all actually came here for.

  • @LARAUJO_0
    @LARAUJO_0 6 років тому +47

    So if you peed your pants in 80 AD you could pee on them again to clean them.

  • @DivideByZeroGetCake
    @DivideByZeroGetCake 7 років тому +10

    Oh PCE toxicity is the least of the problems with it! It biodegrades into vinyl chloride eventually, and that shit is even more toxic than the comments section

  • @ryandowney8743
    @ryandowney8743 4 роки тому +7

    Me: "I can't believe they used to use gasoline to clean clothes, that's ridiculous!"
    TIFO: "Originally they used urine."

  • @jy4266
    @jy4266 7 років тому +3

    I can't believe I'm watching a 9+ minute video about dry cleaning. Im supposed to prepare for my business presentation tonight.

    • @DC-hn9jc
      @DC-hn9jc 3 роки тому

      Actually over 3min is all ad for squarespace, so just waste of time from 6:16 onwards for most of us!

  • @coffeefrog
    @coffeefrog 7 років тому

    I'm not looking to make a website right now, but that was one of the most honest and revealing ads about website creation companies. If I ever make my own website, you sold me on this.

  • @andrewkovnat
    @andrewkovnat 7 років тому +18

    Wow, this is a rather interesting coincidence.
    Last night, I was reworking the lyrics of Ra Ra Rasputin to fit a funny version that I can scream into my mic and hopefully make a UA-cam video of. I looked up words that rhymed with Rasputin, and I decided to use Tetrachloroethylene. This was the first time I had heard of this molecule in my life, but it was long and comedic in the situation I used it in.
    Then, TIFO made this video, and as I read the title, I wondered as to whether or not they would mention this molecule. They ended up doing so.

  • @stavrosgazis5824
    @stavrosgazis5824 6 років тому +1

    I learnt more about Squarespace than how dry cleaning works.

    • @MrEYTheInternational
      @MrEYTheInternational 5 років тому

      Stavros Gazis right I got tired of having to listen and to look at him. Why so many of these people on yt think we want to see them as they condescendingly yammer endlessly is incredible. And lazy.

  • @macbuff81
    @macbuff81 7 років тому +3

    so dry cleaning isn't really dry, it just uses liquids other than water. Good to know. I learned something today :)

  • @deanallenjones
    @deanallenjones 7 років тому

    nice seeing someone being upfront about sponsorship but actually CHECKING OUT their sponsor to make sure they're actually worth promoting. Kudos to the team

  • @LucidAnomalies_
    @LucidAnomalies_ 7 років тому +13

    already knew about dry cleaning but I'm soooo glad you guys made this channel. a lot of your videos have helped me answer questions I've always had in the back of my mind!

    •  6 років тому

      The Anomaly thanks for pointing out this atrocity I'll get the pitchforks you get the Torches I'll meet you at the Town Square

  • @Cinderbloom
    @Cinderbloom 7 років тому

    Seen a couple of adds from Squarespace from youtubers, and I actually think that this is my favourite. He seems really genuine about it, instead of just reading up from a script. So that's nice.

  • @scottster8858
    @scottster8858 7 років тому +7

    Something I hoped would be covered in the video was a fad in in the 50s in the US. People began using gasoline in their homes to dry clean themselves. This led to a lot of deadly fires.

  • @storungz
    @storungz 6 років тому +2

    Simon, you certainly do your sponsors justice when you give your more personal experiences even when you are discussing issues you have had and how the sponsor helped to alleviate them. Gives us something to relate to! Fantastic job as always!

  • @MyFoodTrek
    @MyFoodTrek 7 років тому +4

    This is one of those things I always was curious about, but never bothered looking up. Thank you!

  • @nikkoallen474
    @nikkoallen474 7 років тому

    Wow your the first UA-camr to sell me on using squarespace. Thank you just thank you.

  • @joshhuysamen2755
    @joshhuysamen2755 7 років тому +10

    The advert at the end was almost more interesting that the actual video

  • @myMargaux
    @myMargaux 7 років тому

    Best ad for sqaurespace I've ever seen tbh. I know a lot of UA-camrs promote it, but this is the first time I actually thought that it's probably a great product. He advocated it, rather than just have it as a paid plug

  • @KasperCarti
    @KasperCarti 7 років тому +90

    I work at a cleaners, it's not exciting whatsoever hahaha

    • @tohopes
      @tohopes 7 років тому +99

      It's rather dry?

    • @TheOutZZ
      @TheOutZZ 7 років тому +38

      tohopes That joke was so dry, I choked.

    • @wavecast64
      @wavecast64 7 років тому +6

      Kasper Same here. The carousel is the highlight of my job

    • @Wysiwyg43
      @Wysiwyg43 7 років тому +8

      Art Keighn::: I love the carousel and secretly wish that a fully dressed corpse, draped in plastic, is on for the ride. *Imagination overload*

    • @violeta6846
      @violeta6846 7 років тому +1

      Kasper Is it a hard job to learn when you don't know much about sewing or clothes??

  • @MahoganyDesk
    @MahoganyDesk 7 років тому +2

    Thank you so much for making this video! I work at a dry cleaners and customers ask me this a lot. We use a chemical called "Green Earth," which is environment friendly, doesn't leave a smell, and is safer and gentler (a lot of "do not dry clean" clothes can be dry cleaned with us). The process is still the same, so I'm going to point my customers to your video every time they look at me confused after I've explained it. . . . You're going to get a lot of views.

  • @ROBYNMARKOW
    @ROBYNMARKOW 7 років тому +4

    Love how Simon says(no pun intended) Process( PRO-cess) 😍

  • @wJeffG1966
    @wJeffG1966 5 років тому

    Ads for square space are all over the web, but yours was the most compelling and informative. Definitely going to check it out now.

  • @starshipfantastica
    @starshipfantastica 7 років тому +8

    Funny how when he starts talking about Square Space and all the tech his accent shifts slightly to more of a Californian American sound with a lighter British twang. Almost could pass for born in the USA. That is an Honest ad. Probably a lot of late nights with local friends saying, "dude what happened to my website"

  • @wakrusgumbo
    @wakrusgumbo 7 років тому

    Can I just go somewhere for a second? I actually really like the way you handle ads. It's so earnest, I can tell you actually use what you are pitching, and believe in it. It's refreshing.
    This is one of my favorite channels.

  • @MaxContagion
    @MaxContagion 7 років тому +6

    so dry cleaning has little to do with keeping the clothes dry. never knew. one of those names that totally don't explain the actual process. guess saying "taking the clothes in for a chemical bath" just isn't catchy.

  • @Kataa887
    @Kataa887 7 років тому +1

    Rammstein dry cleaners:
    willst du es nie wieder sehen..? lass es schwimmen in benzin!!

  • @iam1264
    @iam1264 7 років тому +17

    thanks for mentioning degree centigrade along side Fahrenheit

  • @DisstonDave
    @DisstonDave 7 років тому

    I don't need to make a website. I love your videos, educational and interesting, & I really like how personable you are in your videos. This is one of the highest quality channels I know of on UA-cam.

  • @amartin6255
    @amartin6255 7 років тому +6

    4.5 minute video and 4.5 minute ad to equal the total 9 min.

  • @RyTrapp0
    @RyTrapp0 7 років тому

    Definitely one of the better Square Space ads I've seen, so much so that I actually watched the whole thing - well done, good sir!

  • @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis
    @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis 7 років тому +5

    I've heard that liquid CO2 is now being used as a solvent for dry cleaning as well.

    • @allisterjackson6916
      @allisterjackson6916 4 роки тому

      Very few, a few still use perc. But most have gone to a hydrocarbon solvent such as df.2000. some are even using a silicone based solvent.

  • @tarunathya4296
    @tarunathya4296 3 роки тому +1

    seemed to be Johnny Sins for a moment 😂

  • @nesirsitsir
    @nesirsitsir 7 років тому +65

    Ratio: Amount of people who have asked this question : People that know the answer
    13404235023750735903570237502375023508932809:1
    1 = Simon Whistler.

    • @colinrussell2857
      @colinrussell2857 7 років тому +8

      James Bone That's more than the amount of people on the earth

    • @sirturtle5188
      @sirturtle5188 7 років тому +9

      colin russell , aliens are people too.

    • @torokk21
      @torokk21 7 років тому +6

      Are you saying the dry cleaners have no fucking clue what they're doing and are just winging it?

    • @RAM3NOV3RLORD
      @RAM3NOV3RLORD 7 років тому

      Yes, Simon is a god

    • @PierceCuredCanna
      @PierceCuredCanna 7 років тому +1

      Colin Russell it may be more people than are currently alive on earth, but not more than how many people have existed through out history.

  • @elliotmcdeville1117
    @elliotmcdeville1117 7 років тому

    This is the best ad I have seen for a really long time.

  • @cashmoney2909
    @cashmoney2909 7 років тому +1

    I asked a simple question
    I DIDNT ASK FOR A WHOLE HISTORY LESSON

  • @radry100
    @radry100 7 років тому +77

    Why is it called DRY cleaning when they use WET chemicals? Also agitating it in a rotating machine can also damage the fabrics, so why is this more delicate than normal (hand) washing? So many questions but none of them answered. DISAPPOINTED.

    • @MKahn84
      @MKahn84 7 років тому +35

      "Dry" means without water - it's an adjective used in other circumstances as well, such as the name of the Dry Tortugas, which are 7 small islands 70 miles west of Key West. They're little islands surrounded by the sea with frequent rain, yet tey are called "dry" because they are without any source of fresh water.
      The fact that no water is used, that that is the source of the name "dry," and the temperature is lower than in normal laundering was covered in the video. The gentler agitation is not obvious unless you noticed they used front-loading machines and realize that front-loaders are gentler than top-loaders.

    • @peterwelsh6975
      @peterwelsh6975 7 років тому +11

      radry100 you have to understand that the common washing methods of the old days included boiling clothes in a caustic solution, literally beating them on a reed or tin mat, twisting them to get rid of excess water and speed drying. None of these things are good for say.... silk, or lace, or any other thin/delicate material.

    • @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis
      @JohnGeorgeBauerBuis 7 років тому +3

      Peter Welsh by the way, those methods were necessary to remove fleas, ticks and bedbugs from garments.

    • @damien4197
      @damien4197 7 років тому +3

      Dry can also mean a town without alcohol... the point is, without context it is a misuse of the word, because no official definition means "without water" but rather "without liquid".

    • @chloegilbert647
      @chloegilbert647 6 років тому +3

      My wedding dress said dry clean only by an experienced professional....I wasn't paying hundreds of dollars for this process so I put it in my front loader large capacity wash machine on delicate cycle low temperature and it turned out beautifully.

  • @christkandosii3337
    @christkandosii3337 7 років тому +1

    I respect how much work and quality you put into this. It is very informative and helpful.

  • @lesliemoiseauthor
    @lesliemoiseauthor 7 років тому +4

    Thank you for solving this mystery, Today I Found Out.

  • @potraci22
    @potraci22 4 роки тому +2

    Just skip to 5:00!

  • @aarontheblackfox
    @aarontheblackfox 7 років тому +5

    It's 3:45 Am and I'm watching a video on how dry cleaning works... what am I doing with my life..

    • @EweChewBrrr01
      @EweChewBrrr01 7 років тому +1

      You're living the dream. That's what you're doing.

  • @janeramos9472
    @janeramos9472 3 роки тому

    Thanks for sharing such great information. It is really helpful to me. I always search to watch the quality content and finally I found your UA-cam video. Keep it up, keep posting!

  • @whuzzzup
    @whuzzzup 7 років тому +4

    I know you can see what part of a video viewers watched in your analytics. Can I skip the ad part and close the video or do the ad companies want the analytics data for your payout? If so I'd keep it running in the background.

  • @matthewbeeler3354
    @matthewbeeler3354 5 років тому

    9 minute video, 5 minute history lesson, 3.5 minutes of an add for Square Space, 30 seconds of how dry cleaning works....great, got it.

  • @AlergicToSnow
    @AlergicToSnow 6 років тому +4

    So ‘dry’ doesn’t mean no liquid. Just no water.

  • @highlandoutsider
    @highlandoutsider 7 років тому

    along with wren from corridor simon is one of the few who seam genuine when they do any ad stuff, i really like that.

  • @nnedianya
    @nnedianya 7 років тому +4

    omg. he's so cute jut rambling about square space. he just seems like someone making a speech for the first time when he is trying to advertise. like that nervous energy

  • @TNTMans
    @TNTMans 7 років тому

    That's one hell of a title, the father of modern dry cleaning

  • @RealJonDoe
    @RealJonDoe 7 років тому +3

    Great subject, great presentation, ad was far too long.

  • @BrianWiese0
    @BrianWiese0 7 років тому

    great feedback and support about Squarespace and _alternative_ website hosts!

  • @TheKlabim
    @TheKlabim 7 років тому +36

    9 minut video, 3 if which are promotions. nice work

  • @kovaxim
    @kovaxim 6 років тому

    Nice video. Now I know everything I wanted to know.
    This has to be the most honest ad I've ever seen.

  • @MrTuffarts
    @MrTuffarts 7 років тому +5

    He seems faster than usual

  • @ZaneDaMagicPufferDragon
    @ZaneDaMagicPufferDragon 7 років тому

    Bizarre sponsor spot but I love your full on honesty regarding crap web hosting!!! ;)

  • @zacharylagler242
    @zacharylagler242 7 років тому +3

    removing buttons would take too many man hours would it not, and what if they lose a button, miss a button or you get the wrong buttons entirely?

    • @acbthr3840
      @acbthr3840 7 років тому +4

      Then.... that's what happens? My local dry cleaners do remove them if they need to. They have a thing that just pops off the buttons and puts them in a little container that gets set aside. Not exactly labor intensive

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 7 років тому +2

      Zachary Lagler Hm, dry cleaners around here definitely don't do it. Either clothes say 'dry clean' on the label, in which case the buttons are suitable also, or you have to sign a waver, that they are not responsible for any damage.

  • @Bajeffrey
    @Bajeffrey 5 років тому +1

    As a laundress, you missed a step. After the cloths are dried, they are pressed by someone. How they are press depends on what type of equipment the plant has

  • @James-wv1ns
    @James-wv1ns 7 років тому +6

    so dry cleaning is actually not dry

    • @MKahn84
      @MKahn84 7 років тому +1

      And yet it is, because it doesn't use water and that is a definition of dry. Saying it's not dry is like saying that, regardless of weight, no black object can be called "light" because it is dark-colored.

    • @JamesPhillipsOfficial
      @JamesPhillipsOfficial 6 років тому

      dry refers to it goes in dry and finishes dry. plus any use of water such as steam is sparse in molecules of water used so the evaporation is quick meaning it gets dry quickly. if you are expecting to clean stuff using a hair dryer then you are lacking cognitive thinking ability lol

  • @sweetie1027
    @sweetie1027 7 років тому

    Even though I don't need a website, I kept watching your "pitch" anyway. Simon, you listed awesome reasons to get a squarespace. I kinda felt like a proud sister watching that!! 💗👏🏼

  • @RamblinRick_
    @RamblinRick_ 7 років тому +3

    Suggestion for future video: where the phrase, "Blow Smoke Up Your Ass" comes from. Yes, it's literal, a British medical treatment: gizmodo.com/blowing-smoke-up-your-ass-used-to-be-literal-1578620709

    • @shuushirakawa
      @shuushirakawa 7 років тому

      Not gonna go to that website but thanks for the trivia.

  • @SeXiMoNkEy95
    @SeXiMoNkEy95 7 років тому

    "that's not how you do ads" lmfao! I love how his voice changes drastically from when Simon's doing a video to when he's just talking.

  • @Taneth
    @Taneth 7 років тому +2

    Is this why expensive shirts lose their buttons really easily? Just pull on that little loose thread that appears after a while and the whole thing unravels and the button pops off. It's done deliberately for dry cleaners?

    • @ariaalexandria3324
      @ariaalexandria3324 6 років тому

      Buttons are usually sewn on by machine, and the method used doesn't result in any ends being tied off, which means buttons fall off. I always check my buttons when getting something new, and usually end up resewing them all.

  • @sheepgoat
    @sheepgoat 7 років тому

    so half the video was an ad, looks like y'all are really working hard on the content

  • @leonardbrown8414
    @leonardbrown8414 7 років тому +3

    I've always wondered this!

  • @TheIxFa
    @TheIxFa 6 років тому

    I've heard the squarespace ad from a lot of different youtubers but none were nearly as convincing as yours. Good job, well-pitched

  • @valour8510
    @valour8510 7 років тому +13

    So we just gonna ignore the fact that almost half of this video was an ad?

  • @mostafamansour9473
    @mostafamansour9473 3 роки тому

    Video title is how, i never expected that i will waste 9 minuets to hear the history of dry clean instead of how it really cleans

  • @dwarf365
    @dwarf365 7 років тому +7

    video ends at 6:15

  • @RobG001
    @RobG001 5 років тому +1

    What an amazingly varied channel, well done to Simon and (presumably) his team for all the hours of research that goes into it.

  • @NotQuiteFirst
    @NotQuiteFirst 7 років тому +7

    "Turpenteen"

  • @Huntracony
    @Huntracony 7 років тому

    As someone who does know something about coding, building simple sites (like those sample sites) are incredibly easy to make. Like, it's scary how easy it is. So I'd advice anyone wanting to build a site, especially people who already know any programming language, just try doing it with html and css. Javascript and php are not required until you want to do some more complex stuff.

  • @rickysmyth
    @rickysmyth 7 років тому +16

    6:11 video ends. Misleading length

    • @thedudeabides3294
      @thedudeabides3294 7 років тому

      rickysmyth Thanks

    • @yarloo
      @yarloo 6 років тому

      eah, but i was sent a usb from fam in prattsville for a website, and it didn't work and was a pain in the ass. relate

  • @heysupermanlook996
    @heysupermanlook996 6 років тому +1

    What happens to the dry cleaning fluid once its too dirty to use again?

  • @jordanbachynski8054
    @jordanbachynski8054 7 років тому +4

    Holy hell a nine min video that should have been at most a 3 min video. I didn't click for the history for dry cleaning, I clicked to find out how dry cleaners clean my clothes!!!

  • @kurtlawrence4879
    @kurtlawrence4879 6 років тому

    I'll admit that I did not click into this video for the ad thing, yet I learned from it hahaha, thanks bruh

  • @leightonelliott3140
    @leightonelliott3140 7 років тому +15

    Drop the damn in video ads. I realize you get income from them but its annoying even when I pay for youtube red.

    • @hezechiahjones8365
      @hezechiahjones8365 7 років тому +17

      Leighton Elliott They're at the end of the video and you can ignore them. Just go to a different video after they're done.

    • @todddougherty8883
      @todddougherty8883 7 років тому +5

      It's how they support the channel and themselves. The content is great and even the ad at the end, which u don't like, is fun to watch because Simon is so honest in his presentation. You can stop watching whenever you want, especially since you are a UA-cam Red user. Congrats on that, btw. I'll save my $$ and just skip the ads after 5 sec since they pay for a channel that I'm a fan of.
      Or go ahead and complain if that's what you like to do. Enjoy and good luck!! 🙂

    • @ariaalexandria3324
      @ariaalexandria3324 6 років тому +1

      Quite often, the ads are too long. We can actually blame UA-cam Red for this. When there are no ads, the creators get nothing. UA-cam doesn't split that money with them. So they resort to in-video ads to make money instead.

  • @Icosan20
    @Icosan20 7 років тому

    The last part about Squarespace was so fun to listen to and made you wonderful sympatic. You should do this more often

  • @StreakyBaconMan
    @StreakyBaconMan 7 років тому +3

    C'mon, over 3 minutes of the video was an ad. That's a bit much.

  • @seadra
    @seadra 4 роки тому +1

    He talked about the title for a minute, 5:10 - 6:10

  • @ViviBlue-db2br
    @ViviBlue-db2br 7 років тому +3

    Stop using outdated Celsius use Kelvin

  • @jhendkap.2340
    @jhendkap.2340 7 років тому +1

    With a mil subs (congrats btw) it is time to upgrade some acoustic treatments in your room. The sound will be improved! There are many easy and cheap options worth looking into.
    Much Love!

  • @matthewperez3678
    @matthewperez3678 7 років тому +2

    This video shouldn't take 10 minutes to explain you don't need to give us a history lesson just tell us how tf dry cleaners work that's it

  • @Miamcoline
    @Miamcoline 7 років тому

    Awesome and good add as well man! Ill probably use it! Thanks!

  • @laperiphrase
    @laperiphrase 7 років тому

    Anyone else think Simon's the most adorable human being when he goes off script?

  • @digger105337
    @digger105337 7 років тому

    I just wanted to compliment your videos. They all seem professionally done by a large company and I thought you were a hired professional actor.👍👏