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LAUNDRY!

Featured Replies

Hello,

I just moved to Chiang Mai three weeks ago to teach English. I am currently living in the north end of the Old City and am looking for a good laundry place to take my clothes. I've seen several signs and places, but a good friend told me to do some research because they ruined all of her white clothes. Can any one recommend a cheap, good laundry place in the Old City that will not ruin my clothes and do a good job (also that has dryer and does not hang clothes to dry)?

Thank you so much!

Cindee smile.png

Welcome to Chiang Mai.

What you're asking is a very tall order. For starters, if you sort your laundry and place the whites in one bag and the colored items in another and make it clear you want separate loads --- "yeek-gan" making separating motions with your hands -- that might help. It will also mean you pay more. As for finding a place that uses a dryer instead of hanging laundry, you've got to be kidding! Even if they did use a dryer, most of the so-called dryers don't have a heating element, so all they do is tumble your clothes in the air. That just beats them up and causes them to wear out faster.

You may want to check out a very American-looking coin-operated do-it-yourself laundry operation just outside the Old City, on the east side. It even looks like they have heated clothes dryers.

(also that has dryer and does not hang clothes to dry)

Sorry, that just cracks me up.

Actually, if you drive along the outside of the moat and turned the corner to head towards Tapae gate, before you get there, there is a coin operated laundry that is a great find. You can give the attendants enough money to place your clothes in driers and when you come back they are folded and stacked. Granted, not ironed, but pretty close. Tip them some and the service is even greater.

post-118093-0-40510800-1435587248_thumb.

Yup, that was the one I had in mind. Haven't used it like Luther obviously has, but it certainly looks promising.

  • Author

Thank you so much for all of your help and replies smile.pngbiggrin.png

I wasn't sure if dryers were an option here or not, in the states if you hang your clothes up they don't smell very good once dry, but I will definitely try it the Thailand way.

Once again thank you! wai2.gifwai2.gifwai2.gif

Xx,
Cindee

Oh, don't worry. Here they use so much fabric softener that your clothes will smell just fine. They may not feel or look clean, but they'll smell OK.

Oh, don't worry. Here they use so much fabric softener that your clothes will smell just fine. They may not feel or look clean, but they'll smell OK.

Ain't that the truth. And it may be just my imagination or aversion to this totally unnecessary product, but the fabric softener here seems to be so much more 'aggressive' for want of a better word than 'back home'.

We're leaving England later today with suitcases packed with goodies like Ariel laundry liquid but I don't think my choice of detergent is the reason our clothes don't smell bad, and like 99.9% of people here I use the only method available, which is air drying.

I learned many, many years ago that if you put too much into your machine, it can't possibly clean the clothes properly because anything that was particularly whiffy when it went in will not only come out smelling just as bad as it was before it was washed, but it can affect other items in the same load and make them smell a bit too.

Source: Mr K has always been a bit of a gym bunny so whiffy clothes are a bit of a speciality of mine. He's also a tradie, and Ariel bleaches the hell out of everything and gets them squeaky clean. I'm told it's now available in local packaging (not an expensive import) in Vietnam, so I live in hope that it will appear in Thailand soon.

Be the change that you wish to see in the world.

Mahatma Gandhi

  • 3 months later...

Try Em's Laundry (emslaundry.com) I have used them for a long time and can't praise them highly enough. They pick up and return to most locations in Chiang Mai. I live near the Night Bazaar now although I used to be in the Old City, doesn't seem to phase them.

Cheers

right next door to El Diablos (moat and Chang Moi corner) is a great place. they have real dryers there. not cheap by any means but they do a very good job. drop your clothes off with instructions written in Thai language. tip the operator some and she will do all the work for you - wash, dry, and fold. she'll tell you what time everything will be ready for pick-up. we always go there twice a year and have all our blankets, curtains, etc. done. you can either bring your own soap, softener, etc. or buy from them.

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