From declogging drains to hanging cookbooks, see all the brilliant ways you never thought to use your clothes hangers.
17 Clothes Hanger Tips and Tricks
Clothes Hanger Drain Cleaner
Hair clogs in the drain are inevitable, especially if anyone in your family wears their hair long. I’ve found a wire coat hanger the most effective tool for removing them.
First, untwist the wire under the hook. This leaves the hook at one end and a miniature “auger” at the other end. Push the auger end down the drain up to the clog. Bend the free end 90 degrees, forming a handle. Crank the handle so the auger bores into the clog, allowing you to pull it out. — Matt Boley.
Trapeze Clothes Hanger
Here’s a quick way to add another clothes rod in a closet. It’s especially good in a child’s closet, because you can easily adjust the height to accommodate a changing wardrobe and growing child. Use lightweight chain, attached to the upper and lower rods with screw hooks. Squeeze the screw hooks closed with a pliers. — Jim Shephard.
Vacuum Accessory Keeper
Here’s my quick and simple method for keeping shop vacuum accessories handy: Use an ordinary wire clothes hanger for each accessory.
Bend the horizontal bar into an inverted “V,” squeeze the arms together and insert them into the open end of the accessory. The tension will hold the accessory in place. Then mount a row of hooks or screw eyes on the wall and hang the accessories in place. — Richard Siegel.
No-Slip Clothes Hangers
I don’t know about you, but I’ve got different varieties of clothes hangers in my closet. Sometimes you get one of the really cheap, plastic ones when you need an anti-slip hanger. My solution? Wrap pipe cleaners around them. They add a grippy stop to these otherwise slippery hangers.
Hanger Magazine Rack
Plastic Padded Hanger Hack
Tiered Hangers for More Closet Storage
Turn Your Hangers
Store Unused Hangers in a Magazine File
Nonslip Hangers
Belt and Other Hang-Ups
Right Height Cookbook
A countertop isn’t the best place to set a recipe or cookbook while you’re cooking. Besides taking up counter space, it’s difficult to read and likely to get splattered with ingredients.
Instead I take a clothes hanger with pants clips, attach the recipe and hang it from a cabinet handle. Open your recipe book or web printout to the desired page, and close the hanger’s clamps on each side. You now have a hanging recipe stand.
If your cookbook is on the thicker side, it may not hold the weight of the book. However, this hack works well for a relatively small cookbook, a magazine or a single-sheet recipe.
One Place for Storing Scarves
There are dozens of ways to store scarves. You want to find them quickly, but your choice of closet storage depends on whether you want to feature them or hide them away.
Use shower curtain rings on a sturdy hanger, or make a scarf hanger to hold several at a time. These can be stored on hanging rods or hooks attached to your closet wall.
Move Clothes Masterfully
There’s no need to take your clothes off hangers, fold them and stack them in boxes. Just grab a handful of your hanging clothes and wrap the tops of the hangers together with bendable electrical wire or a zip tie.
Drape a garbage bag over the clothes, pulling the tops of the hangers through a hole in the bottom of the bag. Then cinch up the garbage bag handles and tie them together. Your clothes will stay organized and clean while moving them to your new place. To unpack, just remove the bag, untwist the wire and hang your clothes in the closet.