English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

what is best way to get it all done

2007-06-20 04:29:08 · 20 answers · asked by vadonna 4 in Home & Garden Cleaning & Laundry

20 answers

Try getting rid of some clothes. I don't know how big your family is, but if they have that many clothes they may need to cut back some. Give them to a clothing center or Goodwill. If you don't want to do that, find a consignment shop and take them there. Hope this helps.

2007-06-20 04:38:32 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

When you have a ton of stuff to do, its worth hauling it to a laundromat and spending a few hours and a couple rolls of quarters to get it done. In about 3 hours, everything will be clean, folded and hauled back into the house. Then promptly put it away.

Tip: sort before you go, bring hangers, start the sheets and whites first, and have your last load be jeans or towels. That way, the shirts and whites can be folded while you wait for the rest to dry. And by the time the towels and jeans are done, you already have the car loaded up.

We had a clothing store when I was a kid, and had so much laundry, it was the only way to keep up. Otherwise, it was just a constant chore, and we would have gotten nothing else done. If we didn't do this, we would spend a whole day of laundry and cleaning between loads.

Now I have one day I do most of the stuff at home for a week, and an occasional towel load or something in between. The key is to not let it pile up too much. We have four baskets in the laundry room...one for whites, one for towels, one for jeans or work clothes, and one for light stuff. When its full, I do a load. We don't keep laundry baskets in the bedroom or bathroom, just haul stuff there when we are done with it. (No, I don't have kids! I know things aren't that easy with four or five kids in the house!) If you do have kids, they can help fold, and when they see the work, they are more likely to keep their stuff in order.

2007-06-20 04:55:04 · answer #2 · answered by 2 Happily Married Americans 5 · 0 0

Sounds simple enough.

First determine how many you are doing laundry for.

Second determine whose making the majority of your soiled clothes.

Third see if the clothing is soiled or just in the hamper cause they tried it on and didnt put it back in the drawer or closet.

Fourth -Tell whomever it is that is making all the soiled clothes to start doing their own laundry (providing they have been shown how to do it properly). Identify what is soiled or dirty means.

Fifth -if that doesnt work. Start throwing away all the excess clothing. Take the clothes they dont wear to the Salvation Army or other donation locations for the needy. If you reduce the amount of clothes they have to choose from ... you will cut down on your laundry amounts.

Goes to simple supply and demand. If they have less they will use what they have longer.

Its like a room full of toys all over the place. Clean up the room by eliminating a lot of the toys.

2007-06-20 04:48:43 · answer #3 · answered by david a 3 · 0 0

Do not wait start now.

Start doing it one at a time, if by hand.

In case you are using washing machine, use separation method, separate them by white, light colours and dark colours, also keep them separate by water temperature if you use hot water, then do a load at a time, but start now.

I use cold water for every thing, there are cold water soaps that do a good job in cold water.

Go to a "Laundromate" at non pick hoursand do all at once by using few machine at same time, get done this way in no time then do not fall behind, do it regularly or as needed, depends on your life style.

Use dryer if available. Make sure it can be dried in the dryer.

Fold/hang them and put away while other load is in the dryer and one in the machine.

Use a laundry service.
In big city they have paid laundry, you drop it off in the morning and pick up in the evening. They charge by the pound or minimum load size, most machine do 9 pounds of clothing at a time. I have used them in New York, they were next door from my appartment.
In small towns they have ladies who pick up and deliver the laundry just by asking them and charges are reasonable, in both cases.

Hit: Yellow page listed as Chinise laundry, some times.

2007-06-20 04:47:16 · answer #4 · answered by minootoo 7 · 1 0

I too have this evil problem! I finally figured out whether or not I like to, I do laundry every day! I even did all the blankets in my house and put them in a jumbo ziploc bag and put them away. Sorting the laundry into loads also helps, so you can just grab a load and throw it in. My machine can do a load in abouty 30 minutes, so I can do a lot in a day! If your too far behind go to the laundromat and get it all done, then keep up with it. Good Luck!

2007-06-20 07:19:14 · answer #5 · answered by Lisa T (Stop BSL) 6 · 1 0

First, evaluate why you have too much. I have a family of 6, so I know what it's like to be buried in laundry. The best advice I ever got was to get rid of some of our clothes. Decide how many outfits you really need and donate the rest or have a yard sale. Then, make sure your kids are not throwing clean clothes in with the dirty by organizing the way they store their clothes. For small chidlren, buy each child a hanging sweater organizer for the closet. It has 8 compartments. In each compartment, put 1 outfit (bottom and top or a dress ). You could add the underwear and socks, but I keep them separate, since kids get dirty and sometimes need to change clothes but don't need new underwear and socks.

Next, organize your dirty laundry and decide whether you want to spend a whole day doing laundry or do a little every day. Personally, I spend Thursday and Friday as laundry and cleaning days. While the washing machine and dryer are running, I tidy, dust, vacuum and clean bathrooms. That way we have everything nice for the weekend. If you decide on 1 (or 2) laundry day(s) I recommend putting a hamper or laundry basket in each bedroom. Then on laundry day, collect all the hampers, dump them out and sort them back into the hampers (light, darks, whites, etc.) Then just keep cycling them through. If you decide to do a load or two every day, you will need a centralized dirty laundry location -- perhaps the hall or laundry room, with hampers clearly designated bythe way you want the laundry sorted. Then spend some time training each of your family members how to sort. Even toddlers can do this. That way you can pull dirty laundry out of any basket and have a load ready to go.

Very important note: Never put clean laundry into a laundry basket without folding it first. I used to do this and I woudl end up with mountains of unfolded clean laundry in one place and more mountains of dirty laundry in another place, and sometimes the two piles got mixed up. Now I always fold laundry as I take it out of the dryer. It is so much better, and it only takes a few minutes. If I don't have time to fold it when the dryer stops, I leave it and fluff it later when I have time to stop and fold.

Folded laundry gets sorted by owner onto beds. For the little ones, I then go back and organize it and put it away, but for the older kids, I just make sure that all the shirts are together, pants, socks, underwear, etc, so that it is easier for them to put them away. To behonest, it would be just as easy for me to put their clothes away, too, but I think they need the training, so I make them do it.

I really like having "laundry days" because it means that I don't have to feel guilty if I don't do laundry any other day. (Although sometimes I do an occasional extra load.) But I am a stay-at-home mom, so I have that luxury. If you're a working mom, you should try to get your whole family involved. Throw a load in the washer before work, into the dryer when you get home and another into the washer. After dinner, fold the first and throw the second load into the dryer. Get your kdis to help with the folding and putting away -- or have them do dishes, wipe table, sweep floor, so that you can work on laundry. We have a daily 30-minute clean up time, when EVERYONE who is in the house (this includes friends who might be visiting AND mom and dad) works for 30 minutes on anything that needs doing.

Hope my ideas help. Good luck!

2007-06-20 05:02:29 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

i always find that when I have a real back load of laundry I will sort through and start with the laundry that wont need any ironing , that way you can fold it and put it away really quickly before getting to the ironing pile (which i find the most depressing) but at least you won't have much else in the way of dirty clothes hanging around too!!! Also, scoop it all into big towels according to colour, wrap the clothes up in them, then make a neat pile of your bundles....it will look like less, and tidier! Good luck

2007-06-20 04:43:31 · answer #7 · answered by susieapple4 1 · 0 0

I have 5 people in my house hold so we have a lot of laundry too (3 kids). I dont mind washing and drying it, it's just folding it and putting it all up. But when I was doing laundy, if there is some thing stained, tore, not wore very often, etc. I just go ahead and throw it away. It is hard trying to keep up with all the laundry. One way I "try" to do it, is, right when I gt a full load dirty, I wash, dry and put it away then, instead of letting the laundry pile up.

2007-06-20 04:42:16 · answer #8 · answered by mandi_bear1985 1 · 0 0

This saturday, cancel all plans, rent a good book from the library and just do it. Set a timer every time you put in a load and when the timer goes off, go get another one in the machine. I say rent a book because most other activities take your attention off laundry, and you can always set a book down and pick it up when you're finished loading and putting your clothes away.

Number one thing to remember: The laundry is NOT finished until it is put away in the proper drawers/closets!

2007-06-20 04:38:33 · answer #9 · answered by pigscales 1 · 0 0

When doing laundry, it is best to separate into at least three separate loads: dark clothes, light clothes, and white clothes. Check your tags and make sure that you don't have any handwash only or dry clean only clothing in the loads. Then, wash each load. You can add a couple more loads for just towels or sheets/comforters.

Then, wash each load and when one is done washing, hang to dry or put into dryer. Make sure that all the clothes can be put into the dryer before you do so, or else you will shrink them.

Once you have gotten this far, it is a matter of repeating the process, folding your clothes and putting them away. Good luck getting it done.

2007-06-20 04:35:21 · answer #10 · answered by rhapsody1386 2 · 1 0

I totally sympathize with you. My family all work in very "messy" jobs. I have to do laundry ( up to 6 loads) twice a week. Every single day I do a load of towels and a load of tee shirts (at least). If I could afford it I would pay someone to just hang out at my house and watch movies and do laundry. There isn't a stain that can hide from me, but I get sick of it. I have tried skipping a couple days but oh my, I have a terrible time catching up again.

2007-06-20 04:45:09 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers