blueshift wrote:What difference does it make if they charge per piece or per bag? Why is giving you a rate per piece a deal breaker for you?
In the US you would separate your whites from colors (2 bags) and be charged by the weight of each bag. Different charges: a flat rate for up to say 10 pounds, then an addition charge ($1.25) for each pound over or $XX per pound. Assume 10 pounds of laundry - $10, and that would include detergent, bleach, softner and folding. You could have 20 pair of undies, 5 pair of pjs (10 pieces), 10 tee shirts, 10 pair of socks, and it would be $10. To charge by piece would be costly. Flat rate for blankets and comforters.
-- Sun Sep 04, 2011 11:22 pm --
desertdudeshj wrote:I have to agree, getting your clothes done works only on a short term, can get quite costly on a regular basis for everything. Earlier use to get all jackets ( dry cleaned ), comforters and such stuff done from outside and the bills do add up.
So decided to experiment on doing all these at home one day and turned out perfectly well, I'm starting to thing this whole dry clean thing is a sham in the first place. Have tried many items which state dry clean only with regular home washing machine and they turned out just fine.
Its a bit tiresome to clean and iron everything at home but really fills up a lazy evening, get your telly on and iron away
I gather you have many free evenings. Can I send my laundry over to be pressed???
BM has a load of wash from her holiday in Dubai and wants to know if she can drop it off. Think about it, you get to sniff and see her knickers.