We had a chute in an old house. From second floor to basement. When we rented the house out we sealed it. Although one family had rotten kids. I always thought they wouldn’t mind if we unsealed it. One kid had a sniper’s nest upstairs (using a soft pellet rifle) in his bedroom and would pellet people in the street. I hope he enlisted…..
When I was a kid, my mother would say don’t worry about what other people think, they aren’t thinking of you. When you see how judgmental people are of a cartoon it makes you think she was wrong.
When you have back and joint issues, you get creative. I never did the tossing down the stairs thing but figured out how to cut a hole directly from the closet to the basement and covered it with a hamper with no bottom, screwed to the floor. At least it cut the burden in half. Then I just had to leave clean folded laundry downstairs for whoever needed it to bring it upstairs. We sold the house and featured the laundry chute as an amenity.
Sweeping the pile of clothes across that distance seems like it would take more effort/work than picking them up in a bunch or in bunches – even if you would have to make two trips.
I used to do this. My washer/dryer was in the basement and with old, wooden, rickety steps. I had a wire-mesh laundry basket and I would send it head-over-heels down the steps into the basement and then follow down, holding the bannister. Worked great.
Could just put the washer and dryer on the same floor you do the most laundry on. Never understood why the washer and dryer are always put in the basement.
“New from Amazon! Portable, inflatable laundry chute for the overworked housewife! Just pull the chord and it inflates like an airplane emergency exit!”
There is actually a ‘laundry jet’ that works like those office tubes that people used a long time ago. You put your laundry in one end and air sucks it to the laundry room straight into the washing machine. https://youtu.be/-GiFfCELdiw
I had lived in 16 different houses by the time I WAS 16. Of all of those only one had a basement. It had a hatch at the bottom of the linen closet in the bathroom that dropped everything onto a table down there. Of all of the places I have lived (now at 26) only three had basements. Granted I don’t remember the places in Maryland, Ft. Bliss and Germany, but we were in post housing, so I doubt that there were any in those. The house with the hatch was in Indiana and that was my favorite actual house. It was fancy (at least to 12-year old me).
A net bag for the dirty laundry would be another improvisation. Drop it down the stairs and the clothes stay together for further transport to the laundry room.
After guests leave, that is how I get the bedsheets and towels downstairs, I dump them over the railing upstairs. I prefer to have at least one hand free when walking down the stairs on the railing. I’m clumsy.
Everyone talks about how to get the dirty laundry to the washer, but how about a way that’s easy on the back to get it all back where it belongs? It’s just as, if not more, awkward handling a batch of clothes without wrinkling them.
We have a laundry bag in our upstairs hall closet – it is attached to the front of the lowest shelf and the sidewall with 3 hooks on them and 3 rings on the bag – so the bag sits open at the bottom of the closet. On Wednesday night when it time (around 11:30 pm) to do laundry I close the bag and start it rolling down the stairs. I walk down the stairs.
I then drag it to the basement stairs (in the kitchen) which are directly under the upper stairs. I drag it down these stairs since on the wall facing the bottom of these stairs is our collection of electric train cars to play with.
I then carry it to the other room in the basement to do the laundry.
When I am done with the clothing (either same night or next night) I bring down the smaller laundry bag which is hanging on the basement side of the door to it located in the kitchen and add same to the towels from upstairs. Then I do the bedding and towel laundry loads.
The clothes are carried upstairs when done in a basket. The towels and bedding will make the trip upstairs in the laundry bag.
I fold the laundry in bed as I wait for husband to get ready to go to sleep and then continue after the lights are out. Hang his shirts in his closet. Underwear and socks are put away. If towels and/or bedding is downstairs they are folded also, but generally they come upstairs the following night in the upstairs laundry bag and when folded are put into the laundry basket for distribution to upstairs hall closet and the kitchen towels to the drawers in the kitchen.
And writing this may have taken almost as much time as folding does.
Lucy Rudy over 1 year ago
Been there, done that, except for sweeping. I always threw the clothes basket over too. Much landed in it if it fell rightside up.
Ratkin Premium Member over 1 year ago
She’s unhampered by convention.
allen@home over 1 year ago
Whatever works Honeybunch.
Rhetorical_Question over 1 year ago
June Drabble aka Honeybunch?
Macushlalondra over 1 year ago
Use a laundry basket like everyone else!
HappyDog/ᵀʳʸ ᴮᵒᶻᵒ ⁴ ᵗʰᵉ ᶠᵘⁿ ᵒᶠ ᶦᵗ Premium Member over 1 year ago
After they’re clean just throw them back upstairs.
Zykoic over 1 year ago
We had a chute in an old house. From second floor to basement. When we rented the house out we sealed it. Although one family had rotten kids. I always thought they wouldn’t mind if we unsealed it. One kid had a sniper’s nest upstairs (using a soft pellet rifle) in his bedroom and would pellet people in the street. I hope he enlisted…..
therese_callahan2002 over 1 year ago
Why not just carry the hamper downstairs? Or better still, put everything in a laundry bag?
ddl297 over 1 year ago
It’s wash day, and for five people, that’s ALL? Maybe just hers – nah!
Out of the Past over 1 year ago
When I was a kid, my mother would say don’t worry about what other people think, they aren’t thinking of you. When you see how judgmental people are of a cartoon it makes you think she was wrong.
Dobber Premium Member over 1 year ago
When you have back and joint issues, you get creative. I never did the tossing down the stairs thing but figured out how to cut a hole directly from the closet to the basement and covered it with a hamper with no bottom, screwed to the floor. At least it cut the burden in half. Then I just had to leave clean folded laundry downstairs for whoever needed it to bring it upstairs. We sold the house and featured the laundry chute as an amenity.
Doug K over 1 year ago
Sweeping the pile of clothes across that distance seems like it would take more effort/work than picking them up in a bunch or in bunches – even if you would have to make two trips.
dlkrueger33 over 1 year ago
I used to do this. My washer/dryer was in the basement and with old, wooden, rickety steps. I had a wire-mesh laundry basket and I would send it head-over-heels down the steps into the basement and then follow down, holding the bannister. Worked great.
brick10 over 1 year ago
A mesh laundry bag would save the sweeper step.
Cow man over 1 year ago
Could just put the washer and dryer on the same floor you do the most laundry on. Never understood why the washer and dryer are always put in the basement.
Forest Dweller 54 over 1 year ago
Never seen anyone use a Barn broom like that before
Billys mom2022 over 1 year ago
They need to put the washer and dryer upstairs. Then all she would have to take up is the dish towels and cloths.
david_42 over 1 year ago
Our laundry room is on the second floor along with most of the bedrooms. The master bedroom is on the first floor and no kids at home, so …
exness Premium Member over 1 year ago
I have been afraid for years that my death would be caused by tripping on a dog sleeping on the stairs while I am carrying a laundry basket.
Queen of America over 1 year ago
Why aren’t laundry rooms upstairs? There are bathrooms so plumbing shouldn’t be an issue. There are showers so an emergency floor drain should be ok.
tammyspeakslife Premium Member over 1 year ago
“New from Amazon! Portable, inflatable laundry chute for the overworked housewife! Just pull the chord and it inflates like an airplane emergency exit!”
tammyspeakslife Premium Member over 1 year ago
There is actually a ‘laundry jet’ that works like those office tubes that people used a long time ago. You put your laundry in one end and air sucks it to the laundry room straight into the washing machine. https://youtu.be/-GiFfCELdiw
Thomas Overbeck Premium Member over 1 year ago
At first I was like uh oh, Ralph cheated on her…
bigplayray over 1 year ago
And you get a (somewhat;) clean floor!
felinefan55 Premium Member over 1 year ago
I had lived in 16 different houses by the time I WAS 16. Of all of those only one had a basement. It had a hatch at the bottom of the linen closet in the bathroom that dropped everything onto a table down there. Of all of the places I have lived (now at 26) only three had basements. Granted I don’t remember the places in Maryland, Ft. Bliss and Germany, but we were in post housing, so I doubt that there were any in those. The house with the hatch was in Indiana and that was my favorite actual house. It was fancy (at least to 12-year old me).
poppacapsmokeblower over 1 year ago
A net bag for the dirty laundry would be another improvisation. Drop it down the stairs and the clothes stay together for further transport to the laundry room.
Drbarb71 Premium Member over 1 year ago
Laundry chutes are awesome!
Happy, happy, happy!!! Premium Member over 1 year ago
Works for me.
pchemcat over 1 year ago
After guests leave, that is how I get the bedsheets and towels downstairs, I dump them over the railing upstairs. I prefer to have at least one hand free when walking down the stairs on the railing. I’m clumsy.
Martin Booda over 1 year ago
In college I just threw my laundry against the wall. Then I washed anything that stuck.
sisterea over 1 year ago
My bedroom closet opens directly into my laundry room.
The Fly Hunter over 1 year ago
Ralph should carry the hamper down for her instead of just sitting there. It’s the least he could do!
Sailor46 USN 65-95 over 1 year ago
I lived in a small condo in Mayport, Fla, the bedroom was a loft above the rest of the Condo. That’s how I did it.
Georgette Washington Bunny over 1 year ago
A laundry bag would have been so much easier.
Ginny Premium Member over 1 year ago
Everyone talks about how to get the dirty laundry to the washer, but how about a way that’s easy on the back to get it all back where it belongs? It’s just as, if not more, awkward handling a batch of clothes without wrinkling them.
mafastore over 1 year ago
We have a laundry bag in our upstairs hall closet – it is attached to the front of the lowest shelf and the sidewall with 3 hooks on them and 3 rings on the bag – so the bag sits open at the bottom of the closet. On Wednesday night when it time (around 11:30 pm) to do laundry I close the bag and start it rolling down the stairs. I walk down the stairs.
I then drag it to the basement stairs (in the kitchen) which are directly under the upper stairs. I drag it down these stairs since on the wall facing the bottom of these stairs is our collection of electric train cars to play with.I then carry it to the other room in the basement to do the laundry.
When I am done with the clothing (either same night or next night) I bring down the smaller laundry bag which is hanging on the basement side of the door to it located in the kitchen and add same to the towels from upstairs. Then I do the bedding and towel laundry loads.
The clothes are carried upstairs when done in a basket. The towels and bedding will make the trip upstairs in the laundry bag.
I fold the laundry in bed as I wait for husband to get ready to go to sleep and then continue after the lights are out. Hang his shirts in his closet. Underwear and socks are put away. If towels and/or bedding is downstairs they are folded also, but generally they come upstairs the following night in the upstairs laundry bag and when folded are put into the laundry basket for distribution to upstairs hall closet and the kitchen towels to the drawers in the kitchen.
And writing this may have taken almost as much time as folding does.