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Innovation is known as the ability to foresee future and avail which are satisfactory, good-looking, useful and lasting. One of such innovation is Madhu Traders Ceiling Cloth Drying Hanger. It is Eco-friendly as the stainless steel pipes are of high standard that prevent oxidation and rusting also It is space saving as it comes in customized sizes to be fit areas with minimum floor space. These pipes can be managed individually up and down. Ceiling Cloth Dryers are made of stainless steel pipes, handle lockers, rope, and hangers. It is easy to operate since the heavy grade wheels ensure smooth ascension and dissension in any weather condition. Due to its compact design, it can be installed in various spaces like Passages, Bedrooms, Bathrooms, Balconies. WEBSITE : www.madhutraders.com CALL NOW : 9493694930
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rajveerindustries · 9 months
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Efficient Cloth Drying Roof Hangers in Pune | Convenient and Space-Saving Solutions
Looking for cloth drying roof hangers in Pune and Pimpri Chinchwad? Discover efficient and space-saving solutions for drying your clothes with our high-quality roof hangers. Save time and utilize your rooftop space effectively. Shop now for convenient and hassle-free laundry solutions.
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reyesmarconi · 8 months
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THE APARTMENT IN MUTANT TOWN HELL’S KITCHEN*, MANHATTAN. —
Hell’s Kitchen’s far from the predominantly tough working class neighborhood it used to be. Gentrification has given way to higher living prices, yuppies fill the streets and landlords keep trying to think of new ways to kick their old tenants out. But there’s still areas left relatively intact, and Charles lives in one of them. In the last floor of a four story building where primarily families of lower income reside, he has a two bedroom, one bathroom apartment. The living-room is the first thing one sees upon entering and the kitchen occupies a corner of it, with a table for four acting as the dining area. A small hallway to the right leads to the bedrooms on opposite sides and the bathroom as the last door, in the middle. The main bedroom is the one Charles uses for himself. The other room, Cael’s room, is a lot smaller, nowadays kept as a guest and storage room. There’s another door on Cael’s side of the hallway to a small, slightly cramped space that acts as a deposit.
All the furniture is second hand or made by him. The frame walls are brickwork painted a now weathered white whilst the inner walls are smooth, same color. The floors are a wooden laminate, with the exceptions of Cael’s room, which has navy blue carpet, and the bathroom, with ceramic tiling. The ceiling is high rise and made of concrete. The place is located on a corner of the building, which allows for a window by the kitchen, one in Charles’ room and a small one in Cael’s.
The dining chairs do not match and neither does the three-seat couch and faux leather reclinable chair. The living room seats are positioned toward a 32 inch tv set which might be one of the most modern looking sights of the place.  There’s portraits of friends and family on the coffee table; in contrast, you’d find a couple photographs of landscapes hanging on the walls. Further ahead, close to the hallway sits a library stacked with old looking books.
Close to the fire escape exit are the beds for his dog and cat, along their food and water bowls, though they had the habit of sleeping with Cael on his bed or with him more often than not.
The main bedroom doesn’t have much in special. It’s rectangular, four by five. Furniture wise, it has a king sized bed, a nightstand, an inlaid wall closet and a desk. There’s a corner that would be empty if it weren’t for the brown boxing bag hung from the ceiling with an arrangement of pulleys leveraged on the other end by two weights. The floor, like the rest of the apartment, is covered in wooden laminate flooring, rugged in appearance. The walls are painted a light cadet gray, the lighting comes from a nightstand lamp and one on the ceiling. There’s a mirror, near the boxing bag, a framed photograph of a forest above the bed, and a small coat hanger on the back of his door. The desk is by the window and usually natural sunlight hits it, it’s where he sits down to sort through work papers and bills or where he sets his sewing machine when he has to fix a few clothes. The bed will he usually seen in monochrome sheets and the covers are made of thick plaid-patterned wool. On the nightstand rests a lamp, a clock and his keys. Inside the first drawer, which is locked with a key he keeps on himself at all times, are assorted papers and old crumpled receipts and a Glock 17, licensed, and a pair of brass knuckles,. Inside the second drawer is more trash that he should likely throw out, likely useless wires and parts alongside a small jar filled with nails and screws. Right in front of the nightstand and beside the bed is a small rug, the sort of you dry your feet on after showering or put your slippers on. Right beneath, nearly imperceptible from the rest of the flooring is a hidden compartment. Inside there is, among other things, roughly forty thousand dollars in cash earned in different ways, but consistently all illegitimate.
The bathroom tries to be as economical with space as possible, but Charles can still maneuver his way around with relative ease, and take showers without feeling claustrophobic. It’s got that old vintage ceramic tiling covering the floor and the lower half of the walls, the other painted in an extra light cream. The bathtub is encrusted by the tile structure and doubles as a shower.
The kitchen too is small, but cozy. Much of it was there already when Charles bought it, other elements added over the years, so it’s a mismatching mess. It has all important elements you’d expect, and the most remarkable ones would be a vital coffee machine and the first aid kit. Inside the kit is what you’d expect (compress dressings, bandages, antibiotics, painkillers, gauze, scissors, tweezers, needles and thread) to some a little less orthodox or common, like a small notebook with listings of emergency phone numbers, some of which are familiar and some which aren’t. Charles is all around very big on safety and preparation, so you can expect all sorts of items handily stored for many a kind of situations. Outside of it, everything is rather ordinary. On the fridge door stuck with places of America souvenir magnets lay various schedules, assorted reminders of things to do and the phone numbers of many takeout food joints.
It’s a comfortable place, all in all, and he got extremely ‘lucky’ getting it, though you could argue a couple good “connections” boosted the process too (read: it used to be owned by a prominent syndicate in the neighborhood). He got it when Cael was six and he pays a fixed-rate mortgage for it in monthly fees. Despite what might be expected, there’s a sense of homeliness to the place, with a plant resting in the kitchen’s windowsill, another in a corner of the living room, and another in the fire exit balcony. They are spider’s plant, snake’s plant and aloe vera respectively. They all have reputation of being air cleaners and the latter has many medical applications, so even when it comes to decor, Charles would rather shoot two birds with one stone and keep things practical. Add to them the constant clicking of dog paws on the floor, a cat dozing on a kitchen counter where sunlight directly hits, the melodies and voices of an old hits radio station coming from a small sound equipment, filling the empty silence, and you can’t help but get a sense of peacefulness to the place, very much unlike Charles’ former living places.
He’s well known in the building. He’ll fix people’s electronics and washing machines and plumbing for quite cheap, or sometimes even for free, and he’ll be quick to help people if they’re in trouble with pushy collectors or scammers. People are fond of him and some are aware of his deficiencies in the kitchen, so from time to time they made it a habit of sending him and Cael meals or inviting them to dinner as a makeshift payment of sorts, and Charles can’t really complain.
*Note: in the human verse, Charles lives in Hell’s Kitchen. It’s still a relatively gritty-ish version of it, though; think of Daredevil. In his mutant verse, which is his main verse, he lives in Mutant Town, an NYC neighborhood in Manhattan that (as of the late 00s) remained fiercely untouched by development efforts. It’s gotten noticeably nicer by the late 10s, but mostly through the community’s own hand.
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unikhangers · 1 year
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mscreatives1 · 1 year
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Ceiling Cloth Hanger
MS Creatives ceiling cloth hangers are built with the highest quality materials and a contemporary style to serve as a perfect cloth line that takes up no floor space. These are simple to use and attach to the ceiling with brackets. In addition, they are equipped with a pulley for convenient lowering and raising. These are made of stainless steel and are robust, elegant, and cost-effective.
8-1-523/294/1/A Brindavan Colony, Shaikpet, Hyderabad, Telangana 500096
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myhomeproducts · 1 year
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MyHome Products Co., is a leader in manufacturing ceiling cloth hangers, ceiling cloth dryers, balcony cloth hangers, balcony cloth dryers, pulley cloth hangers, pulley cloth dryers, pull & dry cloth hangers & dryers in Hyderabad City
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alifenterprises · 2 years
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Clothes Drying Ceiling Hangers in Hyderabad Permanent solution for drying wet clothes in balcony, wash areas etc. The Ultimate systems for drying your clothes. The ultra modern space saver and compact ceiling clothes hanger to dry clothes inside/outside of your home. Ceiling Hanger can be fixed any where in the roof. It will create free moving space in your home.
Our Services: Cloth Drying Ceiling Hangers Mosquito Mesh Door Aluminum Ladder Window Blend
We Deal Cloth Drying Ceiling Hangers in Hyderabad & Wall Mounted Cloth Drying Ceiling Hangers.
Pure Stainless Steel Material. One Year Warranty. Free Home Delivery & Installations Available from 4ft, 5ft, 6ft, 7ft & 8ft. Permanent solution for dry/wet clothes in your apartment balcony. Zero maintenance. Easy dry system
For More Details: Contact Us: +91 8247485941, +91 8919728587 Website: https://www.alifenterprises.co.in/cloth-ceiling-hanger.html Address: plot no 31 narsingi osman sagar road, ranga reddy, Telangana-500075
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Buy Pulley Cloth Drying Hanger
If you want to shop from the latest collection of Pulley Cloth Drying Hanger, then visit our website. ceiling cloth drying hanger is professional manufacturers and supplier in Hyderabad. We provide in different lengths like 5ft, 6 ft, 7ft, 8ft, and universal width of 2feet at a reasonable price.
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pallavibele · 3 years
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Cloth Drying Pulley System Near Me| Clothes Dryer System in Pune
Roof Mount Cloth Dryer can be fixed any where in the roof. It will create free moving space in your home. It won’t block space like other pedestal cloth stands.  It is mounted to the ceiling and holds a good amount of washed clothes. cloth drying ceiling hanger is a simple method for drying cloth in today’s busy life. It is integrated with a strong nylon rope that hangs wet cloth with stainless steel rods the best ceiling mounted cloth dryer mounted on the roof.
Roof Mount Cloth Dryer can be fixed any where in the roof. It will create free moving space in your home. It won’t block space like other pedestal cloth stands.  It is mounted to the ceiling and holds a good amount of washed clothes. cloth drying ceiling hanger is a simple method for drying cloth in today’s busy life. It is integrated with a strong nylon rope that hangs wet cloth with stainless steel rods the best ceiling mounted cloth dryer mounted on the roof.
Features
Easy to use for all age groups
Length 4 feet- 9 feet ceiling mounted
Save space in house with limited drying space
Indoor cloth dryer no floor space required
The unique product designed to hold an entire load of loundry
The single pipe operation Aluminium pipe rust-free / this pipe anodized coating and in affordable price with warrenty 18 months
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gravelish · 3 years
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Bike Touring and Bikepacking
13 June 2021
I was really happy with my bike and my gear for the ride back from San Francisco. I had considered taking my Surly with the touring gear, but opted instead to take the Warbird and the bikepacking gear. Both would have worked, but I think the latter was simply more enjoyable.
The distinctions between bike touring and bikepacking are nuanced, debated, semantic, and sort of irrelevant, but to me touring implies riding long distances over many days on the road, whereas bike packing suggests more an off-road bicycle equivalent to backpacking. But the line between these two pursuits is blurry. In addition, bike touring and bikepacking are associated with different types of bikes and different ways of carrying gear - a touring bike with paneers versus a mountain bike with soft luggage. But again, the lines are fuzzy.
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My 2019 cross-country trip was pretty classic touring. My Surly Disc Trucker is a classic touring bike and I was loaded with panniers, duffels, and a handlebar bag. But during the past year and a half, my Salsa Warbird has become my go-to bike for both day rides and 3-4 day overnight trips. It’s a lot more fun to ride than the Surly. It’s lighter, it handles better, and frankly, I really like indexed shifting at my fingertips. The Salsa is very much a gravel bike with wider tires and is comfortable on both pavement and on rough gravel roads. On the other hand, the bike requires a completely different approach to packing.
One of the things that makes the gravel bike/bikepacking setup work is that you can’t carry as much stuff, so it’s lighter (it helps that the bike itself is much lighter, too). This not only makes pedaling uphill easier, it makes it easier to maneuver the bike around obstacles or carry it up steps. Combine this with the way the weight is distributed - higher and narrower - and the fact that the bike itself handles more nimbly than a touring bike, and the result is a much more fun and versatile touring rig.
BIKE
The bike is a Salsa Warbird with a 61cm carbon frame. It has Shimano GRX components with 2x11 gearing. It came with an 11-34 rear cassette, which I've swapped out for an 11-40. This gives me a much-needed granny gear for steep, loaded climbs. I had to tighten up a loose derailleur hanger early in the trip, but besides that the only problem was noisy gears as the grit and the crud built up on the chain, the pulley wheels, and the chain guides. Occasional attempts to clean things helped, but it was hard on the road to do a very thorough job.
TIRES
The tires are 700x42s. The front tire is the Teravail Cannonball that came with the bike (4000+ miles), still with the same tube. The rear tire is a relatively new Teravail Washburn set up tubeless. They both worked well - no flats and and few signs of wear over the 1200-mile trip. I topped off the air a couple of times (larger tires means I run fairly low pressure - maybe 45psi).
ATTACHMENTS
A Wahoo Bolt bike computer (and a cadence sensor on the crank). A rear blinker. I had a good headlight, but kept it stowed the entire trip, since there were no night rides and no tunnels. I have bottle cages on my forks and under the down tube. A Salsa Cradle is mounted to the handlebars, to which I strap my sleeping gear. I have an improvised porteur rack above the front wheel (the carbon forks are not intended to carry a traditional front rack) that provides some extra stowage for light stuff and a mounting location for the headlight. All the other luggage is soft stuff strapped to the frame.
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LUGGAGE
Handlebar roll. A good compression dry sack holds my 'sleeping system.' It straps into a cradle on the bars.
Utility bag. Easy to unclip and bring with me when I'm away from the bike. Holds electronics, toiletries, spork and knife, other odds and ends. An additional pouch served as a holster for my iPhone.
Two stem/feed bags. Easy access to snacks, layers, and a little spare space for a bottle of Gatorade, a defrosting burrito, or in one case, a chocolate milk shake.
Gas tank/top tube bag. Small camera, handkerchief, buff, face mask.
Seat bag. Clothing, outerwear (when not strapped on elsewhere), a small cook set, a little food. I strap on a pair of sandals which serve as camp shoes, town shoes, and for potential water crossings.
Frame bag. Tools, spare tube, parts and supplies, water filter, stove, tent poles/pegs, a small daypack, a small towel, and so forth. It’s a good place to stuff frozen burritos, extra napkins, sweaty arm warmers, and other stuff during the day.
GEAR
It’s impressive how much stuff I squeezed into a pretty compact suite of luggage. This photo shows everything I took off the bike when I got home, including the clothes off my back, the helmet and glasses off my head, and the shoes off my feet.
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Shelter/Sleeping. My ‘sleeping system’ fits in a small dry bag on the handlebars. It includes a lightweight tent, a down quilt, and an ultralight air mattress. The combination works to the mid-30s and if it’s colder, I can wear my down jacket. The tent poles and pegs live in the frame bag.
Clothing. A change of bike shorts and socks, a short and long sleeve jersey. A set of lightweight clothes for off the bike. A rain jacket, rain pants, and a light down jacket. I’ve got both fingerless and full-finger gloves. Two headbands, one for sweat, the other for warmth. Arm warmers. Leg warmers. A rain cap. A baseball cap. When I'm on roads and not wearing my rain gear, I usually wear a lightweight yellow vest - both for visibility and as a windbreak.
Cooking. I have an MSR pocket rocket stove in my frame bag and a compact cook set in my seat bag (small titanium pot, fuel canister, lighter, rubber scraper, and a stove stand). I don’t cook much, but mornings are better with boiling water for coffee and oatmeal. I occasionally cook a dinner, such as a dehydrated backpacking meal.
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Food. Unlike backpacking, where you carry food for days or weeks, biking involves resupplying as you go. When expecting to camp, I tend to buy a sandwich or packaged burrito earlier the day, though I always have some sort of backup meal in my gear. I carry instant oatmeal packs and instant coffee for mornings. I keep an assortment of snacks - nuts, string cheese, pepperoni sticks, candy bars, gels, energy bars, fig newtons. Things that cover a range of cravings and nutritional needs and that can be easily restocked at gas stations and general stores.
Drinks. I carried three water bottles, one on each side of the fork and another under the down tube. Whether I use all of them depends on conditions and availability of water. I can typically make room in a stem bag for more water or a large bottle of Gatorade when I expect a long dry stretch. I have a small collapsible water bag and a water filter so I can resupply from natural water sources.
Tools and supplies. The lower portion of the frame pack holds bike tools, supplies (Gorilla tape, super glue, a patch kit), and spare parts (brake pads, chain link, zip ties). An extra tube, a small pump, tire sealant, and a small bottle of chain lube. I keep my good bike multitool and a small knife/scissors in a pocket on one of my stem bags for easy access.
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Electronics. iPhone. Bike computer. Rear blinker. Headlight (not used). Canon SX720 camera (small camera with a good zoom). All USB rechargeable. A good 13mAh battery (I can go three days on phone, blinker, and bike computer with this). And a spare 6mAh battery, just in case. A corded five-outlet USB charger/adapter. An SD-lightning adapter to load camera pics to phone. And several microUSB cables and a lightning cable for phone (this can fail and is critical, so a spare makes sense). Cables and charger live in a pouch in the utility bag. It didn’t happen on this trip, but on long days I can charge phone and bike computer while I’m riding.
Other Stuff: First aid kit, TP, a small fast-dry towel, shower wipes (wish I’d discovered these years ago). Wallet (in jersey or shirt pocket), a bunch of quarters for showers and car washes. A few paper maps for old times sake and souvenir stickers I pick up along the way. The mesh pockets on the stem bags hold a bike multitool, a small knife/scissors, a small bottle of DEET, hand sanitizer, and sunscreen. I have two sticks of Burt’s Bee’s Wax - one is for chapped lips and the other is for my pedals to keep my cleats/shoes from squeaking (I try to keep the two straight). It’s nice to have this stuff easily accessible and not buried deep in larger bags.
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kumaran-and-company · 3 years
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We are Dealer, Suppliers and Wholesale Distribution In Cloth Drying Hangers, Pully System Cloth Drying System, Ceiling Cloth Drying Hanger, Clothes Drying Stand, Ceiling Cloth Stand, Ceiling Mountable Cloth Dryer, Ceiling Cloth Dryer, Cloth Dryer Ceiling Hangers, Pulley Cloth Drying Hanger, Ceiling Cloth Hanger, Pulley and Dry Cloth Hanger, Pull and Dry Cloth Stand, Cloth Hangers, Cloth Stand, Cloth Hanging Stand, Apartment Cloth Drying Hanger, Balcony Cloth Drying Hanger and Stand, Varandah Clothes Drying Hanger, And Stand, Hostels Cloth Drying Hanger and Stand, Individual Home and Villas Cloth Drying Hanger and Stand Hospital Cloth Drying Hanger and Stand, Indoor and Outdoor Clothes Drying Hangers and Stand, Kitchen Cloths Drying Hanger."
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Madhu Traders Ceiling Cloth Drying Hangers are in different sizes starting from 3ft to 8ft with 6 rods. Cloth Drying Roof Hangers are ceiling-mounted and can be fixed anywhere in the rooftop and it can be managed individually up and down. Contact (or) Whats app number: 9493694930.
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Cloth Drying Ceiling Hanger pipes can be managed individually up and down. Pulley Cloth Drying Hanger will create free moving space in your home.  
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Pulley Cloth Dry Hanger
Welltech Systems Ceiling Cloth Drying Hangers are made by Stainless Steel Material that attached to your ceiling & walls. It can use in bathrooms, bedrooms, balconies, Varandas, etc. 
https://welltechsystems.com/pulley-cloth-drying-hangers/
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glenrangel-blog · 4 years
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The Surprising Great Things About Hanging Your Apparel To Dry
Rainy weather and inadequate garden can spell laundry woes for apartments and condos. If you’re always scrambling for drying space in your house, turning tables, chairs and stools into ad-hoc drying racks, you’re likely in need of some smart and spiffy solutions to dry your laundry without robbing your home’s aesthetic. From wall-mounted racks and invisible drawer dryers to ceiling-mounted pulleys and retractable drying systems, here are several solutions to dry your laundry inside your compact apartment without compromising on style. 1. Go for a wall-mounted folding rack Unfold out when you’re drying, fold it back in when you’re done. Voila, it’s so simple. A wall-mounted folding rack is an excellent accessory your kitchen, hallway, bedroom or kitchen, hosting multiple bars that will simultaneously dry several pieces of clothing. The good thing? It can slink back to circumstances of near-invisibility when folded back, without interfering from the surrounding decor. 2. Install invisible drawer dryers The beauty of these elusive drying systems is they’re completely unseen when not in use. With drying bars behind each drawer front, you are able to hang your clothes overnight and possess them fresh and dry by morning - with out any unsightly evidence to demonstrate for this. 3. Hang laundry rods Steel rods inside your kitchen could possibly be the perfect location to air-dry your garments on hangers. Find sturdy drying rods that could withstand the load of the laundry. Finally, you may get swish hangers in timber to double-hat as being a design statement if you have your laundry on full display.
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4. Opt for a ceiling-mounted pulley rack A pulley rack may be reeled up and down utilizing a drawstring. Consider hanging one over your appliance to make drying a finished machine load swift, basic and seamless. Ceiling-mounted drying systems can be found aplenty, both web home based grocery stores, so you’ll be spoilt for choice with regards to selecting a design. 5. Put up a retractable accordion rack Retractable laundry drying solutions are gold for small homes, appearing and disappearing with equal finesse. Got out, wall-mounted retractable accordion racks distributed to form a full-fledged drying system. They’re perfect for placing on the washer, or even in your home or diner, smoothly folding back after use. 6. Create pull-out vertical racks If you’re blessed which has a tall niche, a pull-out vertical drying system would be the solution to your laundry woes. Purchasing a rail mechanism, this product enables you to slide your racks out for drying, and back in again after use. This one’s a task for your carpenter, a great idea is a trusty one on board to breathe life in your vision. 7. Invest in a dryer for clothing Using a tumble clothes dryer, you don’t be concerned about producing a drying system or manually airing your clothes. Watch your clothes dry on the press of the mouse button are available out soft, warm and toasty within controlled heat setting. In the event you haven’t already got a new washer, consider purchasing a model which has a built-in dryer. In this way, you don’t ought to give room for an additional appliance. For more info about gian phoi thong minh tai da nang internet page: click for info.
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armsdealing · 5 years
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THE APARTMENT IN MUTANT TOWN HELL'S KITCHEN*, MANHATTAN. —
Hell's Kitchen's far from the predominantly tough working class neighborhood it used to be. Gentrification has given way to higher living prices, yuppies fill the streets and landlords keep trying to think of new ways to kick their old tenants out. But there's still areas left relatively intact, and Charles lives in one of them. In the last floor of a four story building where primarily families of lower income reside, he has a two bedroom, one bathroom apartment. The living-room is the first thing one sees upon entering and the kitchen occupies a corner of it, with a table for four acting as the dining area. A small hallway to the right leads to the bedrooms on opposite sides and the bathroom as the last door, in the middle. The main bedroom is the one Charles uses for himself. The other room, Cael's room, is a lot smaller, nowadays kept as a guest and storage room. There's another door on Cael's side of the hallway to a small, slightly cramped space that acts as a deposit.
All the furniture is second hand or made by him. The frame walls are brickwork painted a now weathered white whilst the inner walls are smooth, same color. The floors are a wooden laminate, with the exceptions of Cael's room, which has navy blue carpet, and the bathroom, with ceramic tiling. The ceiling is high rise and made of concrete. The place is located on a corner of the building, which allows for a window by the kitchen, one in Charles' room and a small one in Cael's.
The dining chairs do not match and neither does the three-seat couch and faux leather reclinable chair. The living room seats are positioned toward a 32 inch tv set which might be one of the most modern looking sights of the place.  There's portraits of friends and family on the coffee table; in contrast, you'd find a couple photographs of landscapes hanging on the walls. Further ahead, close to the hallway sits a library stacked with old looking books.
Close to the fire escape exit are the beds for his dog and cat, along their food and water bowls, though they had the habit of sleeping with Cael on his bed or with him more often than not.
The main bedroom doesn't have much in special. It's rectangular, four by five. Furniture wise, it has a king sized bed, a nightstand, an inlaid wall closet and a desk. There's a corner that would be empty if it weren't for the brown boxing bag hung from the ceiling with an arrangement of pulleys leveraged on the other end by two weights. The floor, like the rest of the apartment, is covered in wooden laminate flooring, rugged in appearance. The walls are painted a light cadet gray, the lighting comes from a nightstand lamp and one on the ceiling. There's a mirror, near the boxing bag, a framed photograph of a forest above the bed, and a small coat hanger on the back of his door. The desk is by the window and usually natural sunlight hits it, it's where he sits down to sort through work papers and bills or where he sets his sewing machine when he has to fix a few clothes. The bed will he usually seen in monochrome sheets and the covers are made of thick plaid-patterned wool. On the nightstand rests a lamp, a clock and his keys. Inside the first drawer, which is locked with a key he keeps on himself at all times, are assorted papers and old crumpled receipts and a Glock 17, licensed, and a pair of brass knuckles,. Inside the second drawer is more trash that he should likely throw out, likely useless wires and parts alongside a small jar filled with nails and screws. Right in front of the nightstand and beside the bed is a small rug, the sort of you dry your feet on after showering or put your slippers on. Right beneath, nearly imperceptible from the rest of the flooring is a hidden compartment. Inside there is, among other things, roughly forty thousand dollars in cash earned in different ways, but consistently all illegitimate.
The bathroom tries to be as economical with space as possible, but Charles can still maneuver his way around with relative ease, and take showers without feeling claustrophobic. It's got that old vintage ceramic tiling covering the floor and the lower half of the walls, the other painted in an extra light cream. The bathtub is encrusted by the tile structure and doubles as a shower.
The kitchen too is small, but cozy. Much of it was there already when Charles bought it, other elements added over the years, so it's a mismatching mess. It has all important elements you'd expect, and the most remarkable ones would be a vital coffee machine and the first aid kit. Inside the kit is what you'd expect (compress dressings, bandages, antibiotics, painkillers, gauze, scissors, tweezers, needles and thread) to some a little less orthodox or common, like a small notebook with listings of emergency phone numbers, some of which are familiar and some which aren't. Charles is all around very big on safety and preparation, so you can expect all sorts of items handily stored for many a kind of situations. Outside of it, everything is rather ordinary. On the fridge door stuck with places of America souvenir magnets lay various schedules, assorted reminders of things to do and the phone numbers of many takeout food joints.
It's a comfortable place, all in all, and he got extremely ‘lucky’ getting it, though you could argue a couple good “connections” boosted the process too (read: it used to be owned by a prominent syndicate in the neighborhood). He got it when Cael was six and he pays a fixed-rate mortgage for it in monthly fees. Despite what might be expected, there's a sense of homeliness to the place, with a plant resting in the kitchen's windowsill, another in a corner of the living room, and another in the fire exit balcony. They are spider's plant, snake's plant and aloe vera respectively. They all have reputation of being air cleaners and the latter has many medical applications, so even when it comes to decor, Charles would rather shoot two birds with one stone and keep things practical. Add to them the constant clicking of dog paws on the floor, a cat dozing on a kitchen counter where sunlight directly hits, the melodies and voices of an old hits radio station coming from a small sound equipment, filling the empty silence, and you can't help but get a sense of peacefulness to the place, very much unlike Charles' former living places.
He's well known in the building. He'll fix people's electronics and washing machines and plumbing for quite cheap, or sometimes even for free, and he'll be quick to help people if they're in trouble with pushy collectors or scammers. People are fond of him and some are aware of his deficiencies in the kitchen, so from time to time they made it a habit of sending him and Cael meals or inviting them to dinner as a makeshift payment of sorts, and Charles can't really complain.
*Note: in the human verse, Charles lives in Hell’s Kitchen. It’s still a relatively gritty-ish version of it, though; think of Daredevil. In his mutant verse, which is his main verse, he lives in Mutant Town, an NYC neighborhood in Manhattan that (as of the late 00s) remained fiercely untouched by development efforts. It’s gotten noticeably nicer by the late 10s, but mostly through the community’s own hand. 
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