Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Common in NYC but not sure about elsewhere.
I knew a kid in college who mailed his laundry home cross country so his mom could do it and mail it back.
In the 1950s during college, my dad had a special box that he packed laundry into to send home by train for his mom to wash and send back. Admittedly, dorm machines weren’t a thing back then, but still.
Anonymous wrote:So, you pay a housekeeper and want to pay to have your laundry done, but your kids don’t own 7 pairs of underwear?
This is fascinating.
Anonymous wrote:OP there are lots of wash and fold services out there but the level of care and sorting you’re describing is only going to be available from a housekeeper.
Anonymous wrote:Common in NYC but not sure about elsewhere.
I knew a kid in college who mailed his laundry home cross country so his mom could do it and mail it back.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Well I guess I hit upon the group of parents of young kids who all have WFH jobs. We have busy older kids with activities and both of us work outside the home. Our kids do lots of chores (they mow the grass, make themselves meals, do dishes, fold laundry, etc.) and know how to do laundry, but I have found it super inefficient for them each to do a tiny load a couple times per week. We certainly don't buy them enough clothes for them to build up a giant load before running out of things to wear. If there are any actual parents of pre-teens and teens who responded, I'd be glad to take a suggestion on how logistically each one of three kids in the family does their own laundry with a single machine and not owning a full weeks' worth of clothes each. And I agree it's not hard to do laundry, obviously. In fact I like doing it. But in our current phase in life it's at the expense of sleep, exercise, and quality time with my kids.
Anonymous wrote:So, you pay a housekeeper and want to pay to have your laundry done, but your kids don’t own 7 pairs of underwear?
This is fascinating.
Anonymous wrote:Wow I’m sorry OP for the rude comments. I’ve outsourced laundry a few times when life has gotten crazy. My go to is Columbia Pike (not sure if they go all the way to mclean). I’ve also tried Rinse but wouldn’t trust them with anything beyond kids clothes that I don’t care as much about. I found out about that places off of MONA (moms of north Arlington). Plenty of ppl get help with laundry.
I also sometimes pay our cleaning service to fold.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Well I guess I hit upon the group of parents of young kids who all have WFH jobs. We have busy older kids with activities and both of us work outside the home. Our kids do lots of chores (they mow the grass, make themselves meals, do dishes, fold laundry, etc.) and know how to do laundry, but I have found it super inefficient for them each to do a tiny load a couple times per week. We certainly don't buy them enough clothes for them to build up a giant load before running out of things to wear. If there are any actual parents of pre-teens and teens who responded, I'd be glad to take a suggestion on how logistically each one of three kids in the family does their own laundry with a single machine and not owning a full weeks' worth of clothes each. And I agree it's not hard to do laundry, obviously. In fact I like doing it. But in our current phase in life it's at the expense of sleep, exercise, and quality time with my kids.
Family of 4: we pool the clothes, and have enough to wash every two days. There is a hamper for delicates, with extra-delicates going into laundry bags in the same laundry, and a hamper for regular. The delicates and extra-delicates are washed on delicate, low soil, cold water in summer (because it's tepid) and warm water in winter (because it's tepid). The regular get a stronger wash. The really soiled clothes get a pre-treatment. Soiled delicates are washed by hand. The extra-delicates are hung to dry, everything else is dried on very low or low, to preserve fabrics.
But by pooling our clothes... there is no water waste and every wash is full, which increases the friction the clothes get, and improves the washing efficiency.
If there is no family member who wants to be point person for laundry, and you don't want to rotate between family members, then pay your housekeeper more money to implement this system.
I've done it for many years and it's not a burden. When the clothes are clean, they get dumped on people's beds and everyone is responsible for folding and putting away.
Friction damages clothes. See if your clothes look pilly.