Well, everyone says something differently. I know my way has worked, too, but I can’t help thinking…what if there’s a whole new world of laundered clothes out there that I’m unaware of?
Just did laundry again. My machines say, “Detergent, clothes, start up machine.” And that’s what I did. And if you start it up and then open it, the water stops filling, so looks I can’t mix the water with the detergent up before adding the clothes.
Yeah, but you can put in the detergent and then let the machine run a few minutes (door closed - no clothes) to add a few inches of water, then open the lid (water stops), add your clothes, and close the lid again (rest of cycle). That’s how I’ve always done it.
Actually, what I REALLY do is put in detergent, turn on water, then go get the laundry - thus giving the machine time to run some water into the detergent and mix it up - and throw it in.
I bought these stupid towels at Macy’s, where they were on sale. I can see why. Brand name Martha Stewart. I should have looked closer.
I forget where I read this tip, but if your plastic shower curtain is getting grimy, rather than spray and scrub it, take it down and put it in the washing machine with towels on the inside, the curtain on the outside, and the towels will “scrub” the curtain clean.
I usually just get a new shower curtain…
I’m with you. Shower curtain liners cost like $3. Any time I’d spend cleaning them is worth way more than $3.
You’re doing it wrong. Whites do eventually get dingy, and bleach is just bleach, not magic, but it certainly does help to keep things white.
If you’re using enough bleach to eat through fabric, you’re using too much bleach.
Anyway;
water
bleach (if applicable)
detergent (liquid)
laundry
I bought this one, or a variant of it, for $15 that’s PVC and promises to be mildew free, so washing it does make sense.
I cram as much crap as will fit, shove a few more items in, dump an over-full cup of cheapo white crap with flavor crystals on top and let 'er rip. Chunk the whole mess in the dryer and then throw it on the floor. Done.
But then, I was raised in a barn.
I do what the instructions say. On public washers that tends to be detergent, clothes, water. For my own washing machine when I had a top loader, the detergent went into a separate drawer. Now that we have a front loader it still goes into a separate drawer.