Dirty Laundry
Jan. 26th, 2006 01:34 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I had a somewhat unconventional childhood. Some of the things that most people learn to do at home as a matter of course, I had to figure out on my own -- with varying degrees of success. I'm interested in learning how other people manage day-to-day stuff.
I invite you to participate in my Laundry Poll!
[Poll #660554]
ETA: Holy typos, Batman! *blushes and curses non-editable polls*
M.
I invite you to participate in my Laundry Poll!
[Poll #660554]
ETA: Holy typos, Batman! *blushes and curses non-editable polls*
M.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-26 07:16 pm (UTC)Oops... forgot to answer this bit. My ex liked to make things (he was learning Japanese joinery) so I got him to make me a clothes post for things worn once but not yet dirty enough to go into the laundry. It's kind of like a coat rack, but only about 4 feet tall, made from a 4x6 with six pegs. I lurrrrves it. :-)
And I read the laundering instructions on new items of clothing, but then generally cheerfully ignore them unless there's some really special handling required. (But I almost never buy things like that any more, so that's rarely an issue.) Most times all dirty clothing gets tossed in haphazardly together. If anything, I tend to separate by weight rather than color since pretty much everything has been washed a gazillion times by now and nothing runs any more. The only thing I always do separately are sheets (which make up a whole load of their own) and towels (the lint factor).
(no subject)
Date: 2006-01-26 07:40 pm (UTC)M.