An American mum living in the UK has gone viral after sharing an odd washing habit.
Lisa Dollan, who is originally from Georgia, has more than one million followers on TikTok where she shares videos comparing life between the US and the UK.
She met her now husband Paul, from Leeds, in 2009 at a business conference in Edinburgh and immediately "hit it off".
They have a child named Lucas together and she became popular on TikTok after starting her account in lockdown.
Lisa, who is known as Yorkshire Peach on Tiktok, a nod to Georgia being famous for its peaches, has baffled American and British followers with the cultural differences she has encountered.
She previously shared how she's saved money by moving to the UK because she doesn't have to pay for air conditioning or earthquake insurance, and viewers were stunned.
Recently, she baffled followers when she talked about not using a dryer for her clothes in the UK.
One TikTok user asked: "Can't you hang washing out anywhere in the US? It saves so much electricity and is better for the environment."

Lisa replied: "No it is seen as poor there - weird."
An American user laughed in relation and said: "Me an American that hangs clothes and then realising oh wait yes I'm poor."
One said: "They care about that but no access to free healthcare."
Another added: "I would still do it even if I was called poor. My bedding would smell better than theirs anyway."
Lisa has also been very vocal about her support for the NHS after years of paying for healthcare in the US.
Lisa says she is an "advocate of the NHS" after she found herself struggling after having her son.
She added: "I’m such a huge advocate for the NHS and so passionate about it because they really stepped in and saved my life ultimately.
"Because of that I didn’t go back to work straight away and stayed home just to stay with him and get better.
"After this, I went into marketing which is what I went to university for and started doing digital/online marketing with an agency in Leeds. I did that for a few years until it packed in due to Covid-19."