I've got a story about this cleaning product.
Two of our boys went to a local kindergarten in our early days in Tokyo, over a period of nearly four years. They had two uniforms, one that they wore on formal occasions and also on the way to and from school (except on Wednesdays). When they got there they changed into their play uniform, which consisted of a white teeshirt and blue shorts. I never dressed my family in white, especially for play! But that's what we had to do for kindergarten.
The kicker was that the playground was basically dirt. Gravelly dirt! You can see both the uniforms and the playground in the photo below and on this blog post of mine from 2009. Believe it or not they also had a "mud pit", yup, not a sandpit, a dedicated mud pit! You mothers out there can imagine what sort of state our kids clothes came home in! Keeping eveyrthing white was a huge deal.
But the PTA was on top of the situation. One of their fundraisers was selling a wonder soap: this "blue stick". We Marshalls we so concerned that we might run out of them that bought a lot. And ended up with a stockpile. A stockpile that's lasted nine years post kindergarten graduation.
You see, I don't buy my kids white clothes, so once they graduated, we had much less use for the wonder soap!
It is so wonderful that we had to buy some more just recently. No longer from the kindergarten's PTA, but just an ordinary "Drug" store. So if you live in Japan and have light-coloured clothes that need stains removed, this is the product for you!
Our son is starting youchien next month...I’m definitely bookmarking this post!! 😉 thanks for the tip!
ReplyDeleteWhen I was growing up in Sydney in the 1950s they had laundry blue products. I think the main one was called Bluo. Of course washing also involved putting the clothes in a heated copper and stirring them with a broomstick before running them through the mangle. Dirt didn't stand a chance. Must check for Bluo in the supermarket next time I DRIVE there. Stranger things are still around. I recently found Lux soap flakes. Not a fan of detergent.
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