Profoundly grateful. Every time I load my washer, I feel it. I am so very, very appreciative for all the people whose ingenuity and curiosity led to the invention of the modern-day washing machine.
The whole process of washing my clothes takes roughly 5 active minutes of my time. I realize when I add in “thinking about the laundry,” “getting distracted while doing the laundry,” and “rewashing the laundry because I left it wet in the washer for a week,” then the process gets longer. But as far as my active participation in one load, there’s just a couple minutes to start it and a few minutes to hang clothes to dry or transfer to the dryer. As of yet, there’s no automated way to fold the laundry and put it away so we’re still pretty much just as mechanical as our 19th century counterparts. And while I am missing out on the cardio and muscle-toning aspects of washing king-sized bedsheets by hand, I can start a load while the coffee is brewing and feel productive while reading the morning paper.
If I had a pie chart of how I use the most Dr. Bronner’s Sal Suds in my home, the greatest wedge would be laundry. Not because I use a lot per load, but rather because I do a lot of laundry. With five humans, two cats, one dog, and acres of dirt, that’s to be expected.
My laundry cabinet has both Sal Suds and Dr. Bronner’s Castile Magic Soap, but I reach for Sal Suds more often because it’s a bit tougher on stains and more effective in my hard water. I got started using Sal Suds on my clothes not because my dad invented it (sorry, Pop), but because as I learned about problematic ingredients in cleaning products, I realized that any of them left on fabrics in the wash were going to spend a whole lot of time in contact with my skin, and my family’s skin. That adds up to a lot of exposure. In the video, I go into greater detail about these ingredients, but the end result was my wanting “clean” laundry cleaners, which the Pure-Castile Magic Soap and Sal Suds are.
My laundry regimen
It’s pretty is simple. For clothing, use about 1 to 1½ Tbsp. (15-22 mL) of Sal Suds or 3-4 Tbsp. (45-60 mL) of Pure-Castile Magic Soap for each large load in an HE (high efficiency) washing. Double these amounts in standard washing machines.
When I’m washing something grubbier, like towels, I might throw in a 1/4 cup (70 g) of baking soda and with the Castile Magic Soap, because I have hard water, I’ll add ½ cup (120 mL) of vinegar to the rinse water via the fabric softener compartment. Again, double these amounts in standard washing machines. Both the Sal Suds and Castile Magic Soap biodegrade readily and are safe for septic and greywater systems.
For the inevitable ketchup/grass/last night’s dinner on clothing, I pre-treat the stain by dabbing a small amount of Sal Suds directly on to it before washing. For general stains I use a dilution of 1:1 water to Sal Suds and for less intense stains like a ring-around-the-collar, I spray them with my Sal Suds All-Purpose Spray.
That’s it. I feel I should apologize for being so simple, but my laundry comes clean, the colors stay vibrantly in place, and my clothes don’t wear down unduly. I’m good with that.
Then comes the drying
Drying our clothes is probably the single harshest thing we do to them, or at least it is once we’re old enough to find that sliding on our knees on asphalt is no longer fun. The dryer shortens the life-span of our clothes, not to mention takes a tremendous amount of energy. Air-drying clothes is best for the clothes, best for your energy bills, and best for the environment.
Dr. Bronner’s in HE washing machines
While I’ve had many testimonials over the years from customers and colleagues alike about how well Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soap and Sal Suds works in HE (high efficiency) washing machines, we now have the testing to verify this! This is important because HE washing machines use less water and as such, require detergents formulated to have low foam.
The products underwent testing by a third-party research firm and met test criteria for “acceptable HE detergent” when used at the recommended dilutions of either 1 Tbsp. (15mL) Sal Suds or 2-3 Tbsp. (30-45 mL) Magic Soap for a large load. Testing parameters included:
- The soap/detergent suds cannot fill the machine past 1/3 of the window at any time.
- The average cycle time cannot exceed the estimated cycle time by 15 minutes. This would indicate the machine senses excess product/suds and increases the rinse time.
- Machine cannot initiate a “suds lock error” which would be another indicator of an abundance of suds.
- To pass as “an acceptable HE detergent”, the test is done 4 times and must meet the criteria each time.
The three foundational pillars of my house
All this talk about laundry is part of what I rather recently realized are the three foundational pillars of my house: bed, laundry, and dishes. These three tasks control my productivity, my house’s order, and my peace of mind. When my day rolls out in front of me each morning, with its roughly 1202 undone tasks, I get overwhelmed and don’t know where to start. I am a naturally indecisive person – or as I prefer to say, someone who can see the value in many different possibilities. It’s paralyzing. Now I have a starting place. Make my bed, start the laundry, load the dishwasher.
Here’s why. If I do bed/laundry/dishes, then everything else falls into place, or at least it seems to, which is good enough for me. If I neglect bed/laundry/dishes and start elsewhere, then nothing seems done anywhere, regardless of what I might accomplish. At the end of the day, it looks like all I did was lay around.
I’m past the days when life seemed composed entirely of one giant pile of dirty laundry, like some sort of domestic haystack, with kids of varying sizes sliding down it. I don’t mind doing the laundry, but am far happier to have the time with the kids.
Further reading
- Pretreating Laundry Stains
- Sunshine & Sachets: Best Ways to Dry Clothes
- Why (& How) to Ditch Fabric Softener and Dryer Sheets
- Washing Cloth Diapers with Sal Suds & Sunshine
This use and many more are in my book, Soap & Soul: A Practical Guide to Minding Your Home, Your Body, and Your Spirit with Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soaps, available now in hardback on DrBronner.com or at your favorite bookseller, and as an eBook and audiobook (read by me!) from wherever you download or listen.
Sal Suds cleaner shows >60% biodegradation after 28 days per ISO 14593.
Can clothes cleaning liquids be safely used on flax linen and woollen fabrics?
Hi Kylie – If the item is washable, then either Castile Magic Soap or Sal Suds are both gentle enough to it. Not all cashmere or wool is washable though, so check the label first.
Add either 1 capful Magic Soap OR 1/2 capful Sal Suds in a large bowl of water. Wash & rinse gently. Press in a towel to remove excess water and lay flat to dry.