Submitted by Anonymous (not verified)
in
Does anyone know if you can buy the bags that Mark is talking about? I'm travelling next week and am looking forward to applying Marks advice, yet I don't have any dry cleaner bags and won't by the time I leave. What are those bags actually called?
Submitted by Tom Waltz on Thursday August 7th, 2008 6:02 pm

heck, I'd say any large plastic bag would work.

What kind of trash bags do you use?

Submitted by John Hack on Thursday August 7th, 2008 8:08 pm

If you aren't getting your shirts, slacks and suits dry cleaned, you should do it. Just once, to see the quality, and to get the bags.

John

Submitted by Jason Clishe on Thursday August 7th, 2008 9:17 pm

[quote="jhack"]If you aren't getting your shirts, slacks and suits dry cleaned, you should do it. Just once, to see the quality, and to get the bags.

John[/quote]

I'm just saying that I don't have any bags currently; I throw them away when I get my clothes back from the dry cleaner. And I won't be going to the dry cleaner again before I leave for a trip on Sunday

Submitted by Jason Clishe on Thursday August 7th, 2008 10:01 pm

Brilliant! Sometimes the best solutions are staring you in the face, eh? Thanks!

Submitted by Kathie Kinde on Friday August 8th, 2008 9:35 am

My grandmother used to use cheap plastic baggies (the kind you bought before ziplock came along). They still sell them and work great also. She's just pull them apart to roll things in or to put between layers.

Submitted by James Gutherson on Saturday August 9th, 2008 9:10 am

[quote="jhack"]I bet if you asked your dry cleaner for a few, they'd give you a few.

John[/quote]

Yep. I just grabbed two today from my dry cleaners. They had one left over and gave me a new one.