How Dry Cleaning is Done and Who Invented it ….

What happens to clothes after being dropped off at the dry cleaners is a mystery to most. We know that our clothes come back a whole lot cleaner than when we dropped them off, but how? And who first got the bright idea to clean clothing without water?

The earliest records of professional dry cleaning go all the way back to the Ancient Romans.  For instance, dry cleaning shops were discovered in the ruins of Pompeii, a Roman city buried by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. Those cleaners, known as fullers, used a type of clay known as fuller’s earth along with lye and ammonia (derived from urine) in order to remove stains such as dirt and sweat from clothing. That process proved pretty effective for any fabric too delicate for normal washing or stains that refused to budge. (In fact, the industry was so prominent that there were taxes on collecting urine.  Fullers generally used animal urine and would also maintain urine collecting pots at public bathrooms.)

dry-cleaning

As for more modern methods, the biggest revolution in dry cleaning came around in the early 19th century.  Traditionally, Jean Baptiste Jolly of France is generally named the father of modern dry cleaning. The story goes that in 1825, a careless maid knocked over a lamp and spilled turpentine on a dirty tablecloth. Jolly noticed that once the turpentine dried, the stains that had marred the fabric were gone. He conducted an experiment where he bathed the entire tablecloth in a bathtub filled with turpentine and found that it came clean once it dried. Whether a maid and an accident really had anything to do with it or not, Jolly used this method when he opened the often claimed first modern dry cleaning shop, “Teinturerier Jolly Belin”, in Paris.

However a patent for a process called “dry scouring” was filed with the U.S. Patent Office in 1821, four years before Jolly’s discovery. A man by the name of Thomas Jennings was a clothier and a tailor in New York, and soon the first African American to be granted a patent in the United States. (Previous to this, it was ruled that slave owners were the rightful owner of any inventions made by their slaves and could then patent those inventions under their own names.  Jennings, however, was a free man.)

So while working as a clothier, he, like so many others in his profession, was familiar with the age old customer complaint that they could not clean their more delicate clothes once they’d become stained because the fabric wouldn’t hold up to traditional washing and scrubbing. Jennings, thus, began experimenting with different cleaning solutions and processes before discovering the process he named “dry scouring.” His method was a hit and not only made him extremely wealthy, but allowed him to buy his wife and children out of slavery, as well as fund numerous abolitionist efforts.

As for the exact method he used, this has been lost to history as his patent (U.S. Patent 3306x) was destroyed in an 1836 fire. What we do know is that after Jennings, other dry cleaners during the 19th century used things like turpentine, benzene, kerosene, gasoline, and petrol as solvents in the process of dry cleaning clothes. These solvents made dry cleaning a dangerous business. Turpentine caused clothes to smell even after being cleaned, and benzene could be toxic to dry cleaners or customers if left on the clothes. But all of these solvents posed the bigger problem of being highly flammable. The danger of clothes and even the building catching fire was so great that most cities refused to allow dry cleaning to occur in the business districts. In the United Kingdom, for example, dry cleaners had smaller satellite stores in the city where they took in customers’ clothes and then those clothes were transported to a “factory” outside of the city limits where the dry cleaning took place.

The major risk of clothes and buildings catching on fire because of the flammable solvents led to dry cleaners searching for a safer alternative. Chlorinated solvents gained popularity in the early 20th century, quickly leaving the flammable solvents in the dust. They removed stains just as well as petroleum-based cleaners without the risk of causing the clothes or factories to catch fire. That also meant dry cleaners could move their cleaning facilities back into cities and eliminated the need to transport clothes back and forth between two locations.

A chlorine-based solvent with the chemical name tetrachloroethylene, or sometimes called perchloroethylene, became the go-to solvent for dry cleaners in the 1930s. Originally discovered in 1821 by Michael Faraday, “perc” could not only be used in relatively compact dry cleaning machines, but also did a better job of cleaning than any of the other solvents of the day; it’s still the chemical of choice for most dry cleaners today.

While perc is considered much safer than most solvents used by dry cleaners in the past, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in the United States is working to phase the solvent out of the industry. The EPA claims that while wearing clothes treated with perc does not appear to be dangerous, perc can be dangerous if accidentally released into the environment as it’s toxic to plants and animals. Additionally, the EPA also notes that sustained exposure to perc, such as by workers in the industry, can cause health issues with the nervous system, including potentially drastically increased chances of developing Parkinson’s Disease. There are also studies done by the EPA that indicate perc may be a carcinogen. The International Agency for Research on Cancer also classifies the chemical as a “Group 2A carcinogen,” meaning in their opinion, it’s probably carcinogenic.

So how exactly is this chemical used to dry clean clothes? The process of dry cleaning fabric can vary between dry cleaning companies; however, the general method is as so: before placing the clothing item in the machines, workers pre-treat stains by hand, as well as remove any materials that aren’t suitable for dry cleaning (for instance buttons made of materials that may dissolve in perc are removed). The machine works in a similar fashion to normal, in-home washing machines. It agitates the garments and adds in the solvents as it goes, cycling the solution through the machine and a filter as the clothing is agitated.  Temperature is also typically controlled at around 86 degrees Fahrenheit.

Next, the garments are either dried in the same machine or workers move them to a separate machine. During the drying cycle, the temperature is raised to about 140 degrees Fahrenheit, which helps the chemicals evaporate off the clothes faster, while still being low enough not to damage the clothing.  In the end, approximately 99.9% of the chemicals used are removed from the dry cleaned item and recycled for use again in cleaning.

Once the clothes are dry, workers press the clothes, potentially stitch back on any items that had to be taken off, and put the clothing into plastic bags for customer pick-up.

Bonus Facts

  • After the eruption of Mount Vesuvius and the covering of Pompeii in ash, Romans dug tunnels to explore (and loot) the city, long before archaeologists excavated the site.
  • Pliny the Elder, the famed author, naturalist, philosopher, and commander, died trying to rescue people stranded on the shores after the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius.    While attempting to sail his ship near the shore, burning cinders fell on the ship.  Rather than turn around, as his helmsman suggested, Pliny famously stated “Fortune favors the brave!  Steer to where Pomponianus is.”  He landed safely and was able to rescue his friends and others on the shore.  However, he never left.  Before they were able to set out again (they needed the winds to shift before they could safely leave), he died and ended up being left behind.  It is thought he died of some sort of asthmatic attack or by some cardiovascular event, possibly brought on by the heavy fumes and heat from the volcano.  His body was retrieved three days later buried under pumice, but otherwise with no apparent external injuries.  He was around 56 years old.
  • At temperatures over about 600 degrees Fahrenheit perc oxidizes into the extremely poisonous gas phosgene, the latter chemical being popularly used in chemical weapons during WWI.
  • The first widely used chlorine-based solvent was tetrachloromethane, or “Tetra” as it was often called, worked much better than petrol. However, the combination of being both highly toxic and highly corrosive on the dry cleaning machines led to it being phased out by the end of the 1950s.

Source….www.today i foundout.com

natarajan

Message for the Day…” Trust in the God and March to the best of your Ability…”

Sathya Sai Baba

Virtues must be cultivated in each home; each member sharing in the joy with the rest, each one seeking for opportunities for helping others. This attitude must be stuck to, so that it may stay as character. How can a vessel kept with a closed lid be filled with water? It must be open to receive good impulses! In all your efforts, trust in a Higher Power which is ever ready to help you. Then your work is made easy. This comes out of devotion, and reliance on the Lord who is the source of all Power. When you travel by train, you only have to purchase the ticket, board the proper train and take a seat, you can leave the rest to the engine. Do you carry your luggage on your head? So too, trust in the Lord and march to the best of your ability. Have faith and earn the Lord’s grace by using the intelligence and the conscience He has endowed you with.

California’s wildfires are actually changing the appearance of the moon ….

Did you see the Moon last night? I walked outside at 10:30 p.m. and was stunned to see a dark, burnt-orange Full Moon as if September’s eclipse had arrived a month early? Why ?

Bob King in Universe Today….

moon

The Full Moon at 10:30 p.m. last night (Aug. 29). Even at 25 degrees altitude, it glowed a deep, dark orange caused by heavy smoke from western forest fires.

Heavy smoke from forest fires in Washington, California and Montana has now spread to cover nearly half the country in a smoky pall, soaking up starlight and muting the moonlight.

If this is what global warming has in store for us, skywatchers will soon have to take a forecast of “clear skies” with a huge grain of salt.

By day, the sky appears the palest of blues. By night, the stars are few if any, and the Moon appears faint, the color of fire and strangely remote. Despite last night’s clear skies, only the star Vega managed to penetrate the gloom.

I never saw my shadow even at midnight when the Moon had climbed high into the southern sky.
moon2

Last night’s Full Moon seen through an 8-inch telescope at 11:30 p.m. The colors are true.

We’ve seen this smoke before. Back in July, Canadian forest fires wafted south and west and covered much of the northern half of the U.S., giving us red suns in the middle of the afternoon and leaving only enough stars to count with two hands at night. On the bright side, the Moon is fascinating to observe.

I set up the telescope last night and spend a half hour watching this unexpected “eclipse”; sunsets appear positively atomic. The size of the smoke particles is just right for filtering out or scattering away blues, greens and even yellow from white light. Vivid reds, pinks and oranges remain to tint anything bright enough to penetrate the haze.
Fire haze satellite Aug30_edited 1

GOES-8 satellite view of the central U.S. taken at 8:15 a.m. CDT August 30, 2015 show a veil of grayish forest fire smoke covering much of the Midwest with clearer conditions to the southeast. The red line is the approximate border between the two.

But smoke can cause harm, too. Forest fire smoke contains carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and soot. On especially smoky days, you can even smell the odor of burning trees in the air at ground level.

Some may suffer from burning eyes, asthma or bronchitis on especially smoky days even a thousand miles from the source fires.

moon3

Wide-angle view of last night’s Moon. Notice that the smoke is thicker along the horizontal – left and right of the Moon. Above, at a higher elevation, we see through less smoke, so the moonlit sky is a bit brighter there. No stars are visible.

On clear, blue-sky days, I’ve watched the smoke creep in from the west. It begins a light haze and slowly covers the entire sky in a matter of several hours, often showing a banded structure in the direction of the Sun.

A little smoke is OK for observing, but once it’s thick enough to redden the Moon even hours after moonrise, you can forget about using your telescope for stargazing. Sometimes, a passing thunderstorm and cold front clears the sky again. Sometimes not.

The only cures for fire soot are good old-fashioned rain and the colder weather that arrives with fall. In the meantime, many of us will spend our evenings reading about the stars instead of looking at them.

Read the original article on Universe Today. Copyright 2015.

Source……www.business insider.com and http://www.universetoday.com

Natarajan

 

 

மீண்டு வந்த விநாயகர்…..

கடற்கரைப் பட்டினமான புதுச்சேரி, பிரெஞ்சுக்காரர்கள் வசமிருந்த காலம் அது. அப்போது புதுச்சேரியின் கவர்னராய் இருந்த பிரான்சுவா மர்த்தேன் (1674 1693), மணற்குளத்து விநாயகரை உள்ளூர் மக்கள் வழிபடுவதை தடுத்து நிறுத்த முயன்றார்.

இதனால் மனம் சலிப்புற்ற உள்ளூர் நெசவாளர்களும், பிறரும் தெய்வத்தைத் தொழ அனுமதியில்லாத ஊரில் குடியிருக்க வேண்டாம் என்று முடிவெடுத்து, ஊரைக் காலிசெய்துவிட்டு வெளியேற திட்டமிட்டனர். இதனைக் கேள்விப்பட்ட குவர்னர் பிரான்சுவா மர்த்தேன், இந்த நெசவாளர்கள் இல்லாவிட்டால், கிழக்கு இந்திய கம்பெனியின் வியாபாரம் பெரிதும் பாதிக்கப்படும் என்று உணர்ந்து, மணற்குளத்து விநாயகரை வழிபடுவதற்கு விதித்திருந்த தடையை விலக்கிக்கொண்டார். இப்படியான ஒரு கர்ணபரம்பரைக் கதை புதுச்சேரியில் உண்டு.

காலைப் பிடித்தேன் கணபதி நின்பதங் கண்ணிலொற்றி

நூலைப் பலபல வாகச் சமைத்து நொடிப்பொழு(தும்)

வேலைத் தவறு நிகழாது நல்ல வினைகள்செய்துன்

கோலை மனமெனு நாட்டி னிறுத்தல் குறியெனக்கே

என்று மகாகவி சுப்ரமணிய பாரதியாரால் பாடப்பெற்ற அரிய திருத்தலம் இது.

உலகமெலாம் படைத்தளித்தே ஒடுக்குநிலைக் களமாகி

இலகுபிர ணவவடிவாம் எழிலானை முகத்தவனே !

அலகிலருட் சித்தியெலாம் அளித்தருளும் ஐங்கரனே !

மலமகற்றும் புதுவைநகர் மணக்குளத்து விநாயகனே !

என்று யாழ்ப்பாணம் எஸ்.கந்தையா பிள்ளையாலும், இன்னும், தமிழிசைக்கு இலக்கணம் கண்ட வண்ணச்சரபம் தண்டபாணி சுவாமிகளாலும் போற்றிப் பாடப்பெற்ற, வினைகள் தீர்க்கும் இந்த மணக்குளத்து விநாயகப் பெருமானைப் பற்றி புதுச்சேரி வரலாறும், புதுச்சேரி நாட்டுப்புறக் கதைகளும் பலவாறான செய்திகளை நமக்குச் சொல்லுகின்றன.

மணக்குள விநாயகர் முன்னர் வெள்ளைக்கார விநாயகர் என்றே அழைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளார். இந்த ஆலயத்தின் தல புராணத்தின்படி, பிரெஞ்சு கவர்னர்களின் ஆட்சியிலிருந்தபோது, மணக்குள விநாயகரை அகற்றும் நெருக்கடிகள் ஏற்பட்டுள்ளன. விநாயகரின் சிலை ஒருமுறை கடலில் தூக்கியெறியப்பட்டதாகவும் தகவல்கள் உள்ளன. எல்லா நெருக்கடிகளிலிருந்தும் மீண்டு, விநாயகர் எங்கும் நகராமல் இங்கே குடிகொண்டுள்ளார்.

“மணக்குள” என்னும் சொல்லுக்கு இரண்டு வகையான பொருள் சொல்லப்படுகிறது. ஒன்று, மனம்+குளம் என்பது. அதாவது, இலைச்சருகு ஒன்று காற்றின் வேகத்திற்கு தக்கவாறு அசைந்து அசைந்து குளத்தில் வீழ்ந்து சிறு சலனத்தைத் தோற்றுவித்து பின் அமைதியைப் பரப்புவது போல, விநாயகப் பெருமானின் அருள், மனமாகிய குளத்தில் ஒரு ஞானச் சிலிர்ப்பைத் தோற்றுவித்து, அமைதியை நிலைப்படுத்தும் என்பதுவாம்.

இன்னொன்று, மணல்+குளம் என்பது. பழைய புதுச்சேரியில் மணலால் சூழப்பட்ட குளங்கள் நிறைய இருந்தன. அத்தகைய குளங்களில் ஒன்றின் கரையில் பிரதிஷ்ட்டை செய்யப்பட்டதால் “மணற்குளத்து விநாயகர்” மணக்குள விநாயகர் என்று மறுவி வழங்கப்பட்டு வருவதாகவும் கருத்து உள்ளது. அந்தக் காலத்தில் மக்கள், அந்த குளத்தில் நீராடிய பின்னரே இந்த ஆனைமுகக் கடவுளை வழிபட்டுள்ளனர்.

12 ஆண்டுகள் கும்பாபிஷேகம் காணாத இந்த ஆலயத்தில் கடந்த ஏப்ரல் மாதம் கும்பாபிஷேகம் நடத்தப்பட்டது. புதுவை மக்களின் காவல் அரணாக மணக்குள விநாயகர் அருள்பாலிக்கிறார்.

Source…..மகரந்தன்…www.tamil.the hindu.com

Natarajan

Miracles Happening Inside our Body Every Single day….

 

Sometimes you may feel like your body is beginning to creak and fail you on the outside, but do you ever stop to consider the incredible work that is taking place inside of it? There is so much going on and everything fits together so well, that it’s almost impossible to comprehend it. This presentation will remind you that there are miracles going on inside your body every single day.

Heart

Info source: sentientdevelopments.com

Info Source: wonderopolis.com/Image Source: fleetfeetcolumbus
 

Cancer

Info source: cracked.com/Image source dream designs, freedigitalphotos.net 

Brain

Info Source: sentientdevelopments.com
 

Stomach

Info Source: cracked.com/Image source dream designs, freedigitalphotos.net
 

Eyes

Info Source: listverse.com

Energy

Info source: physlink.com

Red Blood Cells

Skin

Hair

Words

Liver

Saliva

Testicles

Kidneys

Hair

 

Digestion

Regeneration

Final Slide

Source….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

 

 

10 Beautiful Quotes By Mother Teresa That Prove She Is A Global Symbol Of Love….

Clad in a white, blue-bordered sari, a woman who needs very less introduction, Mother Teresa, an Albanian-born Indian citizen, became a symbol of love, care and compassion for the entire world. One of the greatest humanitarians of the 20th century, she served the unwanted, unloved and uncared poorest of the poor. For her unwavering commitment, incredible organizational and managerial skills, she was honoured with Nobel Peace Prize in 1979.

I believe Mother Teresa was one of the most quoted people of all time. Apart from her kindness and the desire to make the world a better place, what she was as a person inspires me the most.

So to honour the greatest humanitarian, the world has ever seen, on her 105th birth anniversary, …..August  26….I have come up with 10 of her messages.

1. Do good. Love people. Be happy.

psd-1

2. This is the most heard and most preached line in the world

psd-5

3. We are same-to-same-but-different

psd-2

4. Start smiling more often

psd-4

5. Her quote on peace

psd-7

6. Love, a warm hug or at least a beautiful smile?

 

psd-3

7. The poverty of loneliness

psd-8

8. You can learn from every person you meet in life

psd-9

9. Love begins with forgiveness

psd-10

 

10.  You can influence 10 people. Those 10 can influence 100 more. And so on…

psd-6

Undoubtedly, she is one of the greatest personalities of our time.

I am sure you will agree that she must have thought long and hard before she said them.

Source….Shuvro Ghoshal….www.storypick.com

Natarajan

அன்பு காட்டிய அன்னை….. அவர் பிறந்த நாள் இன்று… 26 August…

அன்னை தெரசா என்று சொன்னவுடன் அவர், ஏழை எளியவர்களுக்கும், தொழுநோயாளிகளுக்கும் சேவை செய்ததுதான் உடனே ஞாபகத்துக்கு வரும் இல்லையா? தொழுநோயாளிகளைப் பார்க்கவே மக்கள் அஞ்சிய ஒரு காலத்தில், அன்னை தெரசா நோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டவர்களுக்குத் தன் கையால் சேவை செய்தவர். அது மட்டுல்ல, தன் வாழ்க்கையை முழுமையாகப் பொதுமக்கள் சேவைக்காக அர்பணித்துக்கொண்டவர் அன்னை தெரசா.

அன்னை தெரசா பிறந்த ஊர் எது தெரியுமா? மாசிடோனியாவில் உள்ள ஸ்கோப்ஜெ. 105 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னால் இதே நாளில்தான் (26-08-1910) அன்னை தெரசா பிறந்தார். கொஞ்ச நாட்களில் தெரசாவோட குடும்பம் அல்பேனியா நாட்டுக்குக் குடிபோய்விட்டார்கள். இவரோட அம்மா, அப்பா இவருக்கு வைத்த பெயர் ஆக்னஸ் கோன்ஞா போஜாஜியூ. ஆக்னஸ் என்றால் அல்பேனிய மொழியில் ரோஜாவின் அரும்பு என்று அர்த்தமாம். அன்னை தெரசாவுக்கு 8 வயது இருக்கும்போதே அவரோட அப்பா இறந்துவிட்டார்.

தெரசாவோட அம்மா இவரை நல்லபடியாகப் படிக்க வைத்தார். பாடப் புத்தகத்தைப் படிப்பதைவிட கிறிஸ்தவ மதப் போதனைகளைச் சின்ன வயதிலேயே நிறைய படிக்க ஆரம்பித்தார் ஆக்னஸ். கிறிஸ்தவ மிஷினரி செய்யும் பணிகளையும் விரும்பிப் படிக்க ஆரம்பித்தார். தெரசாவுக்கு 12 வயதாகும்போதே அவர் ஒரு முடிவுக்கு வந்துவிட்டார். அது என்ன முடிவு தெரியுமா? மதம் சார்ந்த பணிகளுக்குத் தன்னை அர்ப்பணிக்க வேண்டும் என்பதுதான் அது.

அவருக்கு 18 வயது ஆனபோது அயர்லாந்தில் இருக்கும் லோரேட்டோ அருட் சகோதரிகளின் கிறிஸ்தவ மிஷினரியில் சேர்ந்தார். இதன்பிறகு அவருடைய அம்மா, சகோதரியை அவர் பார்க்கவேயில்லை. அந்தளவுக்குச் சமயப் பணியில் மூழ்கிவிட்டார். அயர்லாந்தில் இருக்கும்போது ஆங்கில மொழியைக் கற்றுக்கொண்டார்.

அதுவும் எதற்காகத் தெரியுமா? இந்தியாவில் உள்ள குழந்தைகளுக்குக் கல்வி கற்றுக் கொடுப்பதற்காகத்தான். ஆக்னஸ் முதன் முதலாக டார்ஜிலிங் நகருக்குதான் வந்தார். அப்போ அவருக்கு 19 வயதுதான். இதன்பிறகு அவர் கல்கத்தா சென்று ஏழைக் குழந்தைகளுக்குக் கல்வியையும், வறுமையாலும், நோயாலும் வாடிய மக்களுக்குச் செய்த சேவைகளும் கணக்கிலடங்காதவை.

ஆக்னஸ் கோன்ஞா போஜாஜியூ என்ற அவரது பெயர் அன்னை தெரசா என்று எப்படி மாறியது? அவர் துறவு வாழ்க்கையை லோரேட்டோ கன்னியர் சபையில் மேற்கொண்டார். அந்தச் சபையின் பாதுகாவலராக இருந்த பிரெஞ்சு தேசத்தைச் சேர்ந்த தெரசாவின் நினைவாகத் தன் பெயரை ‘தெரசா’ என்று மாற்றிக்கொண்டார். பிற்காலத்தில் தான் செய்த சேவைகள் மூலமாக அன்னை தெரசா என அழைக்கப்பட்டார்.

Source…..www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day….” Prosperity without the will to share would only breed fear and anxiety…”

Sathya Sai Baba

The Universe is the best university; Nature is your best teacher. With an observant mind you can learn many lessons from rivers and hills, from birds and beasts, from stars and flowers and from trees. The trees offer cool shade to all who seek it; they do not deny it to anyone on the basis of caste, creed or colour. They offer their fruits to all, irrespective of their social or economic status. Prosperity is to be welcomed but that alone is not enough. Prosperity without the will to share it will only breed fear and anxiety. Human nature is an amalgam of animal, human and divine characteristics. Love, compassion, humility, charity – these are all divine. One has to cultivate these in order to be at peace with oneself and others. These spiritual qualities are your real life-savers; they elevate you from being human to the status of the Divine.

NASA Scientist Turns Mars Rover Selfie Into Art….

A ‘selfie’ taken by NASA’s Curiosity Rover has become such a hit that it inspired one of the scientists on the team that created the camera taking the selfie to turn into an artwork.

NASA shared the picture on its Facebook page. It’s titled Le Petit Rover – a reference to French writer-aviator’s book Le Petit Prince or The Little Prince, a book about a planet-hopping ‘prince’ who falls to Earth from an asteroid.

Photo Credit: Facebook/NASA’s Curiosity Mars Rover

The original image is a low-angle self-portrait of the Mars Rover, which shows the vehicle above the “Buckskin” rock target in the “Marias Pass” area of lower Mount Sharp.

Photo Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

The artwork inspired by the original selfie has almost 3,000 likes so far.

Source….www.ndtv.com

Natarajan

67,000 people have already signed up for this one-time opportunity from NASA …I have done Today !!!

This is onetime opportunity… Your Name could fly aboard NASA’s Mars Mission….

natarajan

 

Natarajan

Source….

Natarajan