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Home»Life & Style

Real reason your clothes feel damp in the winter even if they’re dry

amedpostBy amedpostOctober 7, 2025 Life & Style No Comments3 Mins Read
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With colder weather setting in and wind and rain on the way, drying clothes outside has become almost impossible unless you manage to find a few hours of sunshine amid the dreary days.

This means most of us will resort to using clothes airers to try to dry our laundry indoors. These are effective tools that allow you to spread your clothes out and leave them to dry in a ventilated room – but there’s just one problem with them.

If you’ve ever used a clothes airer, you’ll know the feeling of putting your hand on your clothes in the evening and finding that they feel damp. So, you leave them overnight to keep drying and find that in the morning, they still don’t feel dry.

In fact, you could leave your clothes on your airer for days and find that they never feel completely dry.

But it turns out that this isn’t a problem with your airer or with your clothes. Your clothes actually aren’t damp at all, but your brain thinks that they are because of the cool temperature of the fabric.

According to an expert on TikTok, there’s a strange phenomenon that means our brains can’t actually process what “wetness” feels like, so we think things are damp when they’re actually just cold.

Michael McBride explained: “Humans can’t feel wetness. We do not have what are called hygroreceptors. Some animals do – fruit flies do, honey bees do, even cockroaches can detect water – but we physically cannot.

“We can detect temperature changes as water usually feels colder, we can detect pressure changes, like when your hand is underwater and pressure is coming down on it, and we can detect changes in friction, like when liquid slides across your skin more smoothly, but we cannot detect water itself.”

Michael went on to explain that this is also the reason people tend to get dehydrated in dry environments. A person’s sweat dries so quickly in these climates that their thermoreceptors don’t pick up on how much they’re sweating.

He added: “Don’t feel bad if you can’t tell whether your clothes are cold or wet, because our bodies and our brains are literally not built to know the difference.”

Tips for drying clothes indoors

1. Use a Drying Rack

  • Set up a drying rack in a well-ventilated room.
  • Hang clothes with space between them to allow air to circulate.
  • Use coat hangers for shirts and dresses to maximise space.

2. Maximise Airflow

  • Open windows if possible to increase ventilation.
  • Use a fan to help move air around the room and speed up drying.

3. Use a Dehumidifier or Heater

  • A dehumidifier will remove moisture from the air, helping clothes dry faster and preventing mould.
  • A space heater can help, but be cautious and keep it away from clothes to avoid fire hazards.

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