Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Organize Your Laundry Center

When did laundry get so complicated? The simplicity of pure cotton


and clotheslines has morphed into complex science with a myriad of


synthetic fabrics and care labels. And where you do the wash--in a


tiny closet, a small corner of the garage or a full-blown dedicated


laundry room--makes a difference. Streamline your laundry systems


and train your family--and this constant chore will be less of one. Does this Spark an idea?

Instructions


Train your team


1. Place laundry baskets or hampers in each bathroom and bedroom. Dedicate one for clothes needing repairs, stain treatment or hand-washing, and another one for dry cleaning.


2. Teach older kids do their own laundry. Even youngsters can match up socks and sort their dirty clothes into piles of colors and whites. Show your kids hang up clothes, and explain the difference between "dirty" and "worn, but still wearable" to cut down on the weekly load. Remind older kids to empty their pockets--any money found in the washer goes to the finder. See 74 Organize Kids' Rooms.


3. Clip clothespins to the side of each laundry hamper in the house. Teach family members to use them to mark stains on dirty clothes.


4. Make each family member responsible for returning folded clothes to his or her drawers.


Set up the ideal space


5. Create as much counter space for folding as your room allows.


6. Supplement natural light with bright, full-spectrum light to make spot checking easier.


7. Store cleaning products and supplies in cabinets or on overhead shelves away from small hands. Big cubbies at floor level will keep laundry baskets out of the way.


8. Install a retractable clothesline (like those in hotel showers) or a freestanding drying rack that you can pull out when needed. Keep the ironing board nearby--if space is tight, put it on an over-the-door rack along with the iron.


The dirty lowdown


9. Sort clothes by color and also by how dirty they are and what temperature they need. Wash lint distributors (towels and sweatshirts) separately from lint magnets (fleece garments and tights).


10. Zip zippers, hook hooks and button buttons on all garments before washing to minimize wear and tear.


11. Add appropriate products (detergent, bleach, fabric softener and so on) to each load according to the manufacturer's instructions.


12. Fill the washing machine, but don't cram clothes in. Corral small or delicate items into a mesh bag.


13. Dry loads of similar weights so you don't roast a favorite shirt while the towels are still tumbling.







Tags: dirty clothes, laundry baskets, older kids