More popular in third world countries like the Philippines, clothes pegs are used to make sure clothes are securely fastened on a clothes line to make sure at the end of the day all of them have dried.
When I was a child, I saw people using wood pegs. I miss those wooden pegs. Plastics are more colorful but they cannot last that long. Nice photos, by the way. The second photo captured a very lovely sky. My kind of sky. :D
Wooden pegs bring me back in time to a vacant lot in my Uncle's house in Cabanatuan where I learned how to ride a bike; where palay were laid on the ground under the sun and where clothes were hung on clothes line and secured with wooden pegs to dry. Ah memories...We never run out of them.
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When I was a child, I saw people using wood pegs. I miss those wooden pegs. Plastics are more colorful but they cannot last that long. Nice photos, by the way. The second photo captured a very lovely sky. My kind of sky. :D
Wooden pegs bring me back in time to a vacant lot in my Uncle's house in Cabanatuan where I learned how to ride a bike; where palay were laid on the ground under the sun and where clothes were hung on clothes line and secured with wooden pegs to dry. Ah memories...We never run out of them.
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