Monday, September 29, 2008

Blue Monday: A revolutionary idea?

The laundry maid should commence her labours on Monday morning by careful examination of the articles in her care.” I. Beeton The Book of Household Management, S.O. Beeton 1861

Do you know, I really dislike doing the laundry.

I dislike Supermarket shopping more, but laundry comes a close second. If you believe all the advertisements for washing machines and washing powders you’d think that washing was the happiest task on earth. Why then do I feel that washing is a never ending chore and why is my house always covered in laundry detritus?

Before our time when washing clothes and linens required lighting a fire under the copper and hand-scrubbing with bar soap, Monday was most likely to be wash-day. Wash-day was probably assigned to Monday because the arduousness of a wash-day meant that it was best held after Sunday, the day of rest, and in larger houses the whole laundry process from hamper to wardrobe may have taken a week.

Today it is rare to hear of families who follow a strict Monday washday routine, or any laundry routine at all, although I’m sure there are still some who do. Automatic washing machines enable us to do loads of laundry whenever we have a spare moment and we do not have to hang around waiting while the washing is completed. But with all our automation I wonder are we doing more laundry than ever? Has technology led to a false economy? Do we wash too much, and too often?
"Unless you have six kids, or run a hotel, you shouldn't need to wash everyday."

Until four months ago I washed everyday. Or whenever I remembered. I had no real routine. I wondered whether I could return to a single washday. After thinking about my week I felt that it might be possible to spread my washing over two days; one primary wash day, and one ‘overflow’ day. Even to do this I would also need to substantially reduce my washing pile and remind my “Tween-aged” daughter that clothes could be worn for more than five-minutes before being put in the washing pile.

I started this new routine four months ago. The family have had to learn to plan ahead to ensure they will have the clothes they need on certain days and I insist that everyone wears their clothes for longer before they are washed. The biggest struggle I've had is having enough line space to hang out all the loads in one day (I have also been going without the dryer, but that's another story).

Restricting the number of days I wash has revolutionised my week. Really. A much-hated chore now only happens on two days, not seven. The very act of being conscious of the process of washing means I am more in control of it and it no longer feels like it is in control of me.

Put your automatic machine to work for you, not tie you to your laundry. Unless you have six kids, or run a hotel you shouldn't need to wash everyday. Wash less, it'll revolutionise your week.




Saturday, September 13, 2008

About Us

Alison and Megan are Australian Gen-X women with a love of technology and all the comforts of a 21st Century life, but does it make their lives any simpler than that of their forebears?


Here at Before Our Time, they explore the skills and knowledge of their ancestors and wonder whether or not we have sometimes thrown the baby out with the bathwater. Taking as their inspiration old (pre-1970) books, magazines, photographs, films, music, recipes, objects and ephemhera, they springboard from that into applying aspects of past home and family lives to their own fast-paced modern existences. Is there a reason some things were better left behind? What can we learn from past experiences?

These ladies are not just talk and copy, they live the research and subject themselves and their unwitting families to aspects of the lives of their forebears.

Join them on their journey to discover the skills and knowledge needed to live life before 1970.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Links

The Australian Index
Australian Blogs

Sources

Some of the sources we have consulted for information and inspiration:

Blue Monday 29 September 2008
Beeton, I. The Book of Household Management, S.O. Beeton 1861

Line Drying 1 October 2008
Beeton, I. The Book of Household Management, S.O. Beeton 1861
"Hanging out for a clean fight" The Age, May 10 2008

Do you have the stomach for Blancmange? 3 October 2008
Household Cookery The Emily McPherson College of Domestic Economy in Melbourne, 1945

Would your great-grandparents recognise your food? 6 October 2008
Beeton, I. The Book of Household Management, S.O. Beeton 1861
Curnonsky Quote "Make [food] simple and let things taste of what they are."
Smith, A. and MacKinnon JB The 100 Mile Diet


Knitting for the War Effort. 10 October 2008
Isaacs, J The Gentle Arts: 200 Years of Australian Women’s Domestic & Decorative Arts Lansdowne Press, Willoughby, New South Wales. 1987.

Who is teaching our children to cook? 24 October 2008
Kingston, B “When did we teach our girls to cook?” in Australian Cultural History: Food, Diet, Pleasure, 1996 Number 15. pp.89-101
Mills, T and Stark, J “Food tech classes a recipe for good health,” The Age, 20 June 2008. (accessed: 30 June 2008)
Muskett, P E The Art of Living in Australia, 1893: Chapter VIII on 'School Cookery and Its Influence on the Australian Daily Life' (accessed via: http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/)


Halloween Scots-style 31 October 2008
King, A and Dunnett, F The Home Book Of Scottish Cookery (1967)

Time for a cuppa? 2 November 2008
Muskett, P E The Art of Living in Australia, 1893: Chapter VI on 'Diet' (accessed via: http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/)
Beeton, I. The Book of Household Management, S.O. Beeton 1861

Contact us

We love to hear from you. Tell us what you think of our experiences. Suggest others we can try.

Megan: beforeourtime(at)bigpond(dot)com

Alison: beforeourtime(at)iinet(dot)net(dot)au