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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: laundry, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 13 of 13
1. #rufflife Mascots #MaxAndBella Bella does the Laundry

Max doesn't seem too impressed with Bella's laundry attempt.



Let me know if you have any challenge ideas for the #Rufflife Mascots #MaxAndBella

Thanks  B R Tracey

0 Comments on #rufflife Mascots #MaxAndBella Bella does the Laundry as of 8/18/2015 12:28:00 PM
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2. Burano, Italy

Burano Italy is one of my favorite places... full of color and patterns.

1 Comments on Burano, Italy, last added: 10/13/2013
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3. pants on fire again (literally)

The laundry room caught on fire (again) today. The smoke billowed up through the building and into our apartment, so I’m out on the balcony listening to the construction and the jackhammers. They’ve told us not to leave, but the firemen left, so I’m thinking of leaving as well. The last time this happened was October 1, 2008. I blogged about it then and that post could have been written today:

Post from October 1, 2008 on the old sruble blog

How’s life at the Inferno Apartment Complex on Incendiary Lane? Glad you asked. Earlier today, I smelled smoke. I tried to find the cause of said smoke, but couldn’t. A few minutes later, a thick heavy smoke smell filled the room (and I couldn’t breathe, which was very disconcerting). It also seemed a little hazy. I did the smoke check again and discovered that there was smoke wafting in from the hallway (I did NOT open the door, as I am not addle-brained).

While throwing on jeans (no need to go outside in my Halloween themed PJ pants I wear sometimes while being creative), I made a mental list of things I needed to do if there was a fire: encourage LeFurrball to get into his carrier without too much of a fight (ha ha), put on shoes, grab the Remus kitty, car keys, laptop, ID, money … FLEE! (Note: If there were flames or more smoke, I would have grabbed the cat and bolted.)

Before enacting my fire-fleeing list, I called down to the concierges to see if they could elaborate on the disaster that was surely happening, or not. He said that someone’s clothes caught on fire in the dryer!

Our apartment is nowhere near the first floor, where the laundry room is; the smoke came up through the elevator shafts and the vents in our apartment. Our apartment is not smoky anymore because the windows are open and the vents and bottom of the door are blocked off, but the hallways, elevators, lobby, and laundry room are evil smelling. I feel bad for the people with burned clothes.

The fact that someone’s clothing started a fire in the dryer didn’t surprise me. A few months ago, I noticed that clothing coming out of the dryer was so hot, that you would get burned if you touched it (fabric, not just metal zippers). We’ve been drying our clothes on medium or low since then. Dryer fires are scary and charred clothing is not fashionable.

I hope this isn’t a pattern, but just in case, remind me to look out for laundry fires again in 2012. I really wish I would have done laundry yesterday! Argh!

p.s. Unfortunately, I can’t find the pictures from last time. I haven’t been downstairs yet, but I’m guessing it looks similar. Imagine an industrial sized dryer with burn marks that looks a bit like a melted marshmallow, if you only held the marshmallow up to the campfire on one side.

2 Comments on pants on fire again (literally), last added: 9/23/2010
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4. a short true story (about laundry)

I have a cousin who is two years younger and 8 1/2 inches shorter than I am, but she is rather more robust of figure and somehow we were of fairly compatible clothing sizes. This meant that during my junior high period I would frequently receive allocations of hand-me-ups in big brown trash bags--mostly shirts, some skirts and dresses.

This whole pattern suited me fine, because I had already embarked on my Erasmus-esque dissolution and prefered wasting all my money on books instead of on stylish (or fitting) clothes. I wore those hand-me-ups, and I wore them hard. In particular, there was one turquoise long-sleeved ribbed tshirt. It fit better than anything else I'd ever gotten from her, and I wore it at least once a week throughout junior and senior high. Overly frequent washing led to some shrinkage, until it emitted a short line of midriff and was no longer appropriate to wear to school.

In college, I was on the crew team. In the winter, we had to go out on the water (which, by the way, is WET, and cold and splashes) wearing only skin-tight elements that wouldn't get caught in the oars. Thus was the turquoise tshirt reintroduced into my wardrobe; it basically fit the bill. So every weekday morning at 5:45 I would run a mile in that shirt to the boathouse, work out like a maniac, run back to my dorm, rinse it out in my sink, and hang it to dry for the next morning. I sweated in it, bled on it (rowers sustain various disgusting injuries), and wiped my poor desperately runny nose on it constantly (rowing in the winter=not nice).

Needless to say, when that whole piece of my life was over the turquoise tshirt was permanently retired. Would *you* ever want to wear that thing again?! But I didn't throw it away. I was a little nostalgic, and, after all, you never know what day might come. And indeed, in the, um, many years since it has come in handy during times of spring cleaning or winter gym-going (that one time I went, that other year).

Aaaand it came in handy this morning, when I put it on to wear to work. Yes, my friends, that is our current laundry situation.

Let it be known that Janet Reid is so worried about my person and health that she has offered to come over and do my laundry for me. (Actually, that was more than a week ago, wasn't it, Janet?) I politely declined. I'm a big girl; I can do my own laundry. Eventually.

25 Comments on a short true story (about laundry), last added: 4/6/2009
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5. Laundry – Podictionary Word of the Day

iTunes users can subscribe to this podcast

When I think of laundry I think of that pile of stuff that gets dragged or tossed down into the basement to be put into the machine, and later the things that need to be put back in drawers and hung in closets.

But laundryalthough the word first laundry came into English in 1530, it didn’t mean what I mean here until 1916.

For most of the time it didn’t mean the stuff that got washed but the action of washing and the place where you did the washing.

Going further back, in 1377 it wasn’t laundry but lavandry from Old French.  In French lavé is “to wash” and that’s why we sometimes call the bathroom the lavatory.

The French word came from Latin lavandarius, also “to wash,” but that in turn came from another Latin word lavanda which were “the things to be washed,” so we’ve come full circle.

There is a striking similarity between the medieval word lavandry and the name of the flower lavender and this caused early etymologists to go digging for evidence that lavender scent was used for washing or bathing.

Hard looks at the scanty clues got them thinking instead that maybe the blue flower’s name was more related to turning blue with livid anger than to laundry the word or odiferous pile.

Tracing word histories always isn’t a clean process.


Five days a week Charles Hodgson produces Podictionary – the podcast for word lovers, Thursday episodes here at OUPblog. He’s also the author of Carnal Knowledge – A Navel Gazer’s Dictionary of Anatomy, Etymology, and Trivia as well as the audio book Global Wording – The Fascinating Story of the Evolution of English.

1 Comments on Laundry – Podictionary Word of the Day, last added: 2/13/2009
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6. Laundry: A Poem

Two years gone and still your hand
Lifts over the notes we sang to ease you
Home. Winter, and the dark had fallen

Through. Your future then
Was the tricking back
Past time. The smell of laundry
Hung to dry. The strand
of pearls you dared to buy.
The day your mother

Died. Your future was your sight,
Which had gone before you,
And your words,
Eclipsed now, too,
And your hand lifting over the notes we sang,
As if we might go with you, touched.

10 Comments on Laundry: A Poem, last added: 1/22/2009
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7. A Cautionary Tale

As we in the United States check off our to-do lists in preparation for our Thanksgiving holiday, I offer this council:


Beware the Pitfalls of "The Mental List."

I was inspired by this bit of wisdom as I went about my day today. Even though I had no hard and fast scheduled appointments, the plan was to rise at 5:30 AM, so I could be freshly showered, bright-eyed, and ready to dive into my to-do list before the kiddos were even up. 

Two hours and four alarm resets later (as usual), I'm hurrying into my clothes, pulling my hair through a ball cap, and herding my kiddos through their usual start to the school day. Once they were off, it was time to get to that list.

Thing is, I never wrote it down. It started with two things, so I figured there was no need to waste the paper. Even I couldn't forget a measly two things: an errand, and cleaning the house.

So, I hopped in the truck and set out to complete that errand. Thirty minutes later, mission accomplished. I got back in the truck, and while it warmed up, I started thinking. All that was left was to go home and clean the house.

"Cleaning" for me always begins with vacuuming, which caused me to remember that first I'd have to finish the three loads of laundry piled up on the carpet before I could vacuum. "Laundry" was then added to the mental list. 

Because I have to pass my kitchen to get to the laundry room, I remembered the quickly ripening bananas on my counter that I wanted to mush up and bake into banana bread before they went all black and yucky. "Bake banana bread" was next added to the list. 

Also on that counter was a bill I needed to pay. "Pay bill" dully added to the mental list. 

Since I pay my bills in the office, I was reminded of the many teeny sheets of paper with lists scattered on my desk - and by "scattered" I mean, of course, set about in a totally meaningful and organized fashion. Anyway, three of those lists were Christmas wish lists. Which reminded me I still have Christmas shopping to do. And since I was already out, I figured I'd better work on that a while, too. "Christmas shopping" was then added to the mental list.

So, with the truck sufficiently warmed up, I put it in gear and zoomed off to Target (I hate shopping, but I do love that store) to cross a few goodies off the 'ol Christmas lists. Forty-five minutes later, I exit the store with some lovely surprises for under the tree. I loaded them in the back of the truck, and headed for home so I could finish the rest of that mental list.

On the way home from shopping, I mentally ticked off what I purchased and tried to remember what else I still want to find. Oh! There is that one store in town I need to go get the thing for the person (Haha. You thought I was gonna give something away, didn't ya?), so I resolved to take the appropriate exit. In the meantime, my mind wandered off to calculate how much time I had left before the bus would arrive to drop off my little lovelies from school.

WHOOSH! I blew right by my exit. Crud. It took me 5 extra miles to get to the next exit and backtrack to where I wanted to be. Despite the unexpected detour, I ended up finding what I wanted and getting home in plenty of time to meet the bus. So I unloaded my finds, grabbed a bit of lunch, and told myself I'd start cleaning as soon as I finished eating, then get to the bus stop. 

Well, it's not very entertaining talking to oneself at lunch, so I brought my food into the office. That way, I could do some online shopping at the same time and tie up some loose ends that came up during the brick-and-mortar shopping.

So, I'm clicking along, price-checking, fiddling with codes (hmmm...which is worth more: the fifteen percent off, or the free shipping), finding new ideas with every click. I was feeling pretty good until I shifted the papers on my desk to find the one I'd scribbled a code onto. Instead, I found one upon which was scrawled, "Pay bill."

WHOOPS! The bill! I dashed back out to the kitchen, grabbed the bill from the counter, went back to the office, and paid the bill online. And then I heard the bus. 

Crud! My surprises were still setting out in plain sight, and there wasn't enough time to put them away. So I threw a blanket over them, closed the office doors, and crossed my fingers that the kiddos hadn't yet reached that search-the-house-for-anything-suspicious stage that presents itself at this time of year. Happily, Lovely Girl and Handsome Boy are not yet at that stage, and they dutifully stayed away from the office.

So while they headed to the kitchen for a snack, I managed to finish my last online purchase (for now). Then I commenced with the next items on my mental list: Laundry. Vacuum basement. More laundry. Vacuum upstairs. Even more laundry. Vacuum kitchen. Oh, crud! The bananas! 

So, I started to get the dry ingredients measured for the banana bread, when the washer buzzed. I moved clothes from washer to dryer, and put a few in a basket. I hauled the basket upstairs to hang the clothes, then came back to finish the banana bread. I added the rest of the dry ingredients. Wait a minute. Where's the sugar? I know I measured it...Oh, crud! I did flour for the sugar. Managing to fix that, I held part of it aside to be added after the bananas. I blended in the bananas. Then I put in the eggs and the rest of the dry mixture.

Now, if you are a baker, you know that when dry ingredients are added, you have to start the mixer out slow, right? Well, just before I hit the switch, I remembered that I still needed to fix a dish for my part of Thanksgiving at my sister-in-law's tomorrow. As I added that to my mental list for tomorrow, I flipped the switch all the way up to "beat."

POOF! I was blasted in the face by an explosion of flour, baking power, baking soda, sugar, and salt as the mixer jolted into turbo mode. I hurried to shut it off again, but the damage was already done: the counter was coated in white powder, and so was I. 

So, here I am a few hours later. I'm sitting in my clean house. My errand is mentally checked off. My purchases are safely tucked away. The bill is filed. The laundry is done. The banana bread is cooling. And I'm thinking about that dish I have to make tomorrow. It's a garden salad. That's all I have to do. 

I don't really need to write that down.

Do I?


2 Comments on A Cautionary Tale, last added: 11/27/2008
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8. Love in the Time of Laundry

[on the way to the laundromat]

Rally Monkey: We only have $10. I might have to get more money.
YT: No, $10 will be more than enough.
RM: With all this?! I bet it won't!
YT: Trust me, it will be just fine.
RM: You can't go and jam all of this into one washer!
YT: Wanna bet?
RM: You really remind me of my mother sometimes.
YT: *I* remind you of *your* mother?!
RM: Yeah. She always wanted to do everything her own way, even when she didn't know what she was doing. Then she would go and screw everything up and my father, who was right all along, would have to come and fix everything.
YT: Don't talk to me about your father and laundry!! Your father is the one who reserved all the bacon fat and lumpia frying oil and made soap out of it!
RM: You're right, that was stupid.
YT: You kids walked around smelling like fried breakfast!
RM: That was one time only.

[later, coming home]

RM: I can't believe you rushed off from the laundromat without drying any of your clothes just because you can't stand around and wait for a dryer to be free.
YT: Dude, I have to be somewhere in like an hour. I don't have time to dry. I'll hang these up to dry at home.
RM: Everything will smell like mold!
YT: It will be just fine.
RM: Your life is toooo important to have clean clothes and to not smell like dirty socks?
YT: That's right.
RM: You know what you remind me of? The little kid story with the grasshopper and the ant. The ant works hard all summer to save up for the winter, and the grasshopper just plays around.
YT: Then the kids come and fry the ants with their magnifying glass?
RM: No, then the grasshopper comes and steals the ant's socks.

[later, hanging up all the undried socks and underwear everywhere in the house]

RM: You really need to do your laundry more often! Then you wouldn't run out of your own socks and have to steal mine like a sock monster.
YT: You know, maybe you should seek help for your persecution complex. After all, look at all the trouble a persecution complex got Nixon into.
RM: I recognize these socks! I bought them with my own money!
YT: Wow. How troubling. I'm really worried about you, because I think that you actually believe that these were once your socks. The most insidious kind of persecution complex of all.
RM: [weeps]

[suspending socks on a shoestring tied between doors]

RM: This will never work! This was a bad idea!
YT: You wouldn't know a bad idea if it hit you in the head. Or you wouldn't have gotten mixed up with me in the first place.
RM: You're right! Bad idea!

[He's now on the phone with my mother. Boo.]

7 Comments on Love in the Time of Laundry, last added: 10/27/2008
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9. slooshy sloshy, slooshy sloshy, get that dirty shirty clean

I'd love to say that this was all my own idea, but I can't do that. I saw the very excellent Susan Rudat's washing machine drawing and thought 'why oh why wasn't that my idea'. Then I stole it.
And, here's a pile of dirty clothes thrown in free of charge. I'm too good to you.

36 Comments on slooshy sloshy, slooshy sloshy, get that dirty shirty clean, last added: 8/31/2008
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10. Poetry for Laundry Day

On this date in 1934, the first Laundromat, called a “washeteria” was opened in Fort Worth, TX. Right in my own backyard, so to speak. [Thanks, Lee BH, for that tidbit from Days to Celebrate: A Full Year of Poetry, People, Holidays, History, Fascinating Facts, and More (New York: Greenwillow, 2005).]

How about some poetry about laundry?

Sock Eater
by Betsy Rosenthal


On laundry days

my mother says

the dryer is a crook.


It’s all because

a sock is gone—

the one the dryer took.


I tell my mom she shouldn’t

let the dryer

see us eat.


It’s sure to munch a sock or two

because it craves a treat.

From: Rosenthal, Betsy R. 2004. My House is Singing. Illus. by Margaret Chodos-Irvine. San Diego: Harcourt.

I’ve written about this anthology before and cited “My House’s Night Song” as my tribute poem when I moved into my new home last December. I continue to find more gems as I pore over this collection. And if you need more laundry poetry, look for:

Janeczko, Paul B., comp. 2001. Dirty Laundry Pile: Poems in Different Voices. illus. Melissa Sweet. New York: HarperCollins. (however not ALL the poems are about laundry!)

As we say in Texas—who’da thunk it? Poetry about laundry?!

Picture credit: www.jupiterimages.com

5 Comments on Poetry for Laundry Day, last added: 5/16/2008
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11. NYC trip looming

Here is a unique idea in the world of gallery shows. "Fill in the Blanks" marries art and performance art by providing canvases, frames and lumps of clay for artists to develop over the course of the show dates. Mary Brooking of the Maine Illustrators' collective will be one of the featured artists.

I am busy prepping for my trip to New York. The SCBWI conference does not start until Friday, the 8th but I am going early to show my portfolio to Art Directors and do research at the New York Public Library and meet up with friends and family. A week away from home! ACK! I've thrown myself into a whirlwind of laundry, packing, and list making. Lists for portfolio revisions, lists for what to take, lists of addresses and phone numbers, subway maps, amtrak timetables... I like traveling, love the train, and can't wait to visit the city but I am a little nervous too.

A list:
1. Remember to breathe
2. Work on Chapter 2, Ballet
3. Revise cat montage
4. Finalize portfolio, make sure you have 2, dummy books attached
5. Pack clothing
6. Pack sketch book, traveling drawing kit.
7. Confirm appointments
8. Mapquest directions for Providence train station
9. Highlight relevant subway routes.
10. Check on subway passcard for the week
11. Society of Illustration hours?
12. Breathe.

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12. Summer goals

I haven't posted much recently. That's because my arm was partially eaten by a giant pile of laundry. I have figured out that if I am wearing the right glasses I can fold laundry and catch up on my friends list, but I can't comment or write my own posts. I have also been in research land.

I love research land. I love gathering resources, filling out interlibrary loan applications, and picking up the books when they arrive. I love the way index cards fit in your hand. I love the sound they make when you ca-chunk them together after a particularly successful day of taking notes. The problem is that I love it so much, I could go on reading and taking notes for a long time without doing my own writing.

So, for the month of June I pledge to:
Write the first chapter of my non-fiction WIP, and start Chapter two.
Complete note taking for my fiction WIP with the three books I have out now. (Due June 26 anyhow.)
Revise Roar illustrations.

That is if the giant pile of laundry doesn't find...no...not now... I have important research to do! Ahhhhhhhhh!

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13. Organizing Book Thoughts On A Completely Random Day

I have today off work. I usually work on Wednesday, so this is actually an extra day of freedom in my week. I should be using this time to clean up my so very messy house. And I did a little bit of cleaning. But mostly...not.

I read a book. Desperate Journey. I liked it. I'll talk about it later.

I puttered around the Internet. Found this great riff on the new iPhone. (Thanks Daily Nooz).

I ordered two shirts from One Horse Shy, the TEAM PLUTO shirt and the Stewart/Colbert 2008. I debated on the Orange is the New Tan shirt, but went with the others.

I laughed at the Chickens to the Rescue Stage Performance and promptly wondered how I could steal - I mean - use the idea. I enjoyed a review of Toys Go Out over at Seven Impossible Things, and not just for the subtle, anti-Tulane references.

I checked on another kidlitosphere friend to see if we can still help her win a photo contest and we can.

I threw in a load of wash. And then another. And there will probably be at least one more. I'll fold the clothes and match the socks - oh so many socks - during the American Idol show I recorded. Don't scoff, it's the perfect laundry-folding show.

I need to put my sweaters in my dresser drawers, because apparently it is no longer going to be a balmy seventy degrees, but actually winter. And it's January, so probably about time I got around to putting the cold weather clothes in my room rather then pulling sweatshirts out of the boxes one at a time.

But in the book world, a post in Finding Wonderland started me thinking about how I organize my thoughts about books. As I am done with a book, I make notes. Sometimes its just little reminders, a quote from the book, or a thought I had while reading. Sometimes I basically write the whole post. I tried writing in a notebook, but I kept misplacing it. I tried writing in a word document, but I found I would want to add to it at work. Now I send my notes in an email to myself and file the message in a reviews folder until I want to use it. Some, I suspect, will never be used. Some I use the next day, it just depends what I feel inspired to write about it.

So, while I winterize my wardrobe, only three months behind schedule, comment and discuss your own system for remembering, recording, and reviewing books.

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