How I easily insert a fallen lace into my sweatshirt with a cocktail tube

Nowadays, various items of clothing with laces are very popular. These are various hoodies, and sweatshirts, and sweatpants. Such things are convenient and practical, but have one drawback: they "lose" the lacing.
At every corner, popular bloggers talk about the convenience and undeniable advantages of oversize fashionable clothes. Particular emphasis is placed on the fact that this beautiful clothing completely hides all the flaws of the figure, or rather, completely hides it. Having succumbed to universal hysteria, I naturally bought myself a cool hoodie and no less cool sweatpants.
After the first wash, I got a new fun game called “Draw the Lace in Place”. Each time I fought bravely and puffed over my fashionable clothes, trying to bring in the ill-fated lace, and after a lot of time I still succeeded.
On one of the beautiful spring days, my patience, exactly like my torment, came to an end when on a walk the lace threaded into the hood of my cool sweatshirt caught on a tree branch and remained on it. It’s good that I noticed the loss of the “fighter” in time and returned to pick up the lace.
Having searched the way on the Internet and noting that there were no pins in the house, I decided to come up with my own suitable way, so that without much effort and in a short time, put the lace back in place.
I began to look for at least something remotely resembling a pin. Most of all, cocktail tubes proved to be suitable for this role. Having threaded one end of the lace into the tube, I realized that with any attempt to put it into the proper hole, it treacherously pops back out. So, you need something to fix it in a straw. Only a stapler came to hand.
I re-inserted the cord into the tube (this time only 3-4 centimeters) and secured it with a stapler. Then she passed the resulting design into the hood of a sweatshirt. Due to its smooth surface, the tube glides perfectly along the fabric and quickly appears at the second hole. Pulling the straw from the other end, I disconnected it from the cord (if you can’t remove the bracket yourself, you can use the anti-stapler). And the lace itself was tied to a large knot so that it never again left its rightful place.
Also, the tube can be used if suddenly one of the ends of the lace fluffs. To do this, I take and cut a piece of straw, pass the string into it so that it does not stick out from one end, and heat it over an open fire.