Anonymous wrote:Help me get tomato sauce stains out of my DS’s nice cotton tees. I soak in OxiClean, wash on warm with lots of detergent, and the stains still take multiple rounds of this to come out—if they ever do.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand people who ONLY use clean clothes. It seems so wasteful to throw out stained clothing. We have separate play clothes and nice clothes. I'm ok with sending the lightly stained play clothes to preschool because that's where they get dirty to begin with. The stains we get are usually artwork-related, my kids are fairly tidy eaters at this point.
I rarely iron their play clothes - but most of them are cotton and don't wrinkle much to begin with. I will iron clothes if we're going somewhere nice.
Anonymous wrote:What's the best leave-in conditioner you have found? My girls like their hair long and it's very pretty but one of them has very thick hair and it's a nightmare!
Anonymous wrote:I spend hours a week removing stains. For some people that is a waste of time, but I listen or watch TV as I do it. If a shirt has a stain I can’t remove I toss it, but that’s rare. Her hair is easy. I put it in a half ponytail with a little clear plastic band and a clip bow. Stays in all day. I take pride in how she looks![]()
My kid gets as messy and disheveled as any other 3 year old, but it's not difficult to start the day clean and orderly, or to keep her stuff in general good repair. I think it helps that I line-/rack-dry almost all of her clothes, versus putting them in the dryer.
Anonymous wrote:For all the "crisp" kid parents - what brand polo shirt launders the best? My DS may wear any color polo and khaki shorts/pants for his "uniform".