Tidy Your “Laundry Chair” for Good: How Simone Giertz’s Laundry Chair Solves the Half-Worn Clothes Problem
The Laundry Chair: A Clever Fix for the Half‑Worn Clothes Pile
Almost every home has one: the “laundry chair” buried under half‑worn jeans, hoodies you’ll wear again, and gym clothes waiting for another round. It’s not quite dirty, not quite clean, and it usually ends up in a chaotic pile that makes your bedroom feel cluttered and your mornings more stressful.
Simone Giertz’s Laundry Chair, now available on Kickstarter, is designed specifically for this everyday problem. Part seat, part swivelling storage system, it gives your in‑between clothes a dedicated home without sacrificing a usable, comfortable chair.
In this guide, you’ll learn how the Laundry Chair works, why it’s more than just a novelty, and how to use it to keep your space tidier and your daily routine calmer—without becoming a minimalist overnight.
Why Half‑Worn Clothes Always End Up on a Chair
The “laundry chair” isn’t about laziness—it’s about a missing system. Most homes have:
- Closets and drawers for clean clothes
- Hampers for clearly dirty clothes
- No dedicated place for clothes worn once or twice but still wearable
Behavioral research on clutter and decision fatigue suggests that when people don’t have a clear, low‑effort “default spot” for items, they choose the path of least resistance—like dropping clothes on the nearest horizontal surface. Over time, this:
- Makes it harder to find items you know you wore recently
- Contributes to visual clutter, which is linked to higher perceived stress
- Discourages you from re‑wearing clothes, which can increase laundry loads unnecessarily
“Most clutter isn’t about owning too much—it’s about not having the right ‘home’ for the right kind of item. Half‑worn clothes are the perfect example.”
— Professional organizer (case observation, 2025)
The Laundry Chair tackles this exact gap by creating an intentional “home” for half‑worn clothing that’s as easy to use as tossing things on a chair—but with far better outcomes.
How Simone Giertz’s Laundry Chair Works
The Laundry Chair is both a functional seat and a structured storage tool. According to coverage from The Verge and the Kickstarter campaign details as of March 2026, its core idea is simple: take the messy “clothes pile” and spread it into organized, swivelling layers.
While specifics may evolve during production, the core features include:
- Swivelling panel system that fans out, giving you several surfaces to drape or lay clothes.
- Usable seat so you still have a real chair—not just a storage object.
- Open, visible storage so you can see what you have at a glance.
Giertz is known for turning playful, “useless” inventions into surprisingly thoughtful products. The Laundry Chair follows that tradition: it takes something we joke about—the chair covered in laundry—and turns it into a deliberately designed object.
How to Use the Laundry Chair to Finally Retire Your Clothes Pile
To get the most out of the Laundry Chair, treat it as a tool with rules, not just another surface. Here’s a practical setup you can follow once you receive it from Kickstarter (if you choose to back it).
Step 1: Decide What Belongs on the Laundry Chair
Limit the chair to clothes that meet all of these criteria:
- Worn once or twice and still fresh enough to wear again
- Items you’re likely to re‑wear within the next week
- Garments that don’t crease badly when draped or folded lightly
Step 2: Assign Each Layer or Panel a Purpose
Use the swivelling structure to create a simple mental map. For example:
- Top layer: Items you’ll likely wear tomorrow (e.g., outfit prepped for the morning).
- Middle layers: Casual wear you plan to re‑wear within a few days.
- Bottom layer or back: Workout clothes or loungewear that you’ll wash after one more use.
Step 3: Build a Two-Minute Night Routine
Each evening, spend two minutes making decisions:
- Anything clearly dirty → goes directly to the hamper.
- Anything you’ll re‑wear this week → goes to the Laundry Chair, on its assigned layer.
- Anything you won’t re‑wear soon → back into the closet after a quick air‑out, if appropriate.
This routine is deliberately short. Research on habit formation suggests tiny, consistent behaviors are far more sustainable than big, occasional clean‑ups.
Step 4: Reset Weekly
Once a week—often on laundry day—reset the chair:
- Move worn‑out items to the wash.
- Return still‑clean, unworn items to your closet.
- Give the chair a quick dust or wipe‑down.
Common Obstacles—and How the Laundry Chair Helps (and Doesn’t)
No product is a magic wand. The Laundry Chair can make it easier to stay organized, but it won’t replace every habit you already have. Here are common challenges and realistic ways to work with them.
“I Just Toss Clothes Wherever When I’m Tired”
End‑of‑day fatigue is real. The Laundry Chair reduces friction by:
- Being as close and convenient as your current clothes chair
- Not requiring folding—just draping or laying items on layers
Still, you’ll need a tiny behavior shift: consciously aiming clothes at the chair instead of the floor or bed. Starting with just one type of garment (like jeans) can make this easier.
“My Space Is Really Small”
In small bedrooms or studios, every square inch counts. The Laundry Chair can actually be space‑efficient if:
- You’re already using a chair as a dumping ground
- You swap that chair for the Laundry Chair, gaining storage without taking extra floor space
If you don’t currently have a chair in your bedroom, consider whether a combined seat‑plus‑storage piece fits your layout before backing it.
“I’m Worried It’ll Just Become Another Pile”
That’s a valid concern. The Laundry Chair helps by visually separating items into layers, but if you overload it, it will look messy again. To prevent that:
- Set a capacity rule (e.g., “No more than 10 items on the chair.”)
- When it’s full, something must go to the laundry or back to the closet before you add more.
“The best organizing tools are the ones that work with your existing behavior. If you already throw clothes on a chair, upgrading that chair into a better system is a smart move.”
— Home design consultant, interview summary (2025)
Potential Benefits: Less Clutter, Less Stress, and Smarter Laundry
While long‑term research on this specific chair doesn’t exist yet, several well‑established findings about home organization suggest realistic benefits when you use a system like this consistently:
- Less visual clutter: Spreading items across structured layers is easier on the eyes than one overflowing pile.
- Faster mornings: Outfits for the next day can live on the top layer, cutting down rushed decision‑making.
- Fewer unnecessary washes: When you can see and access half‑worn clothes, you’re more likely to re‑wear them once more instead of defaulting to “just wash it.”
- More intentional wardrobe use: You get an at‑a‑glance snapshot of your most‑worn items, which can inform future shopping or decluttering decisions.
Laundry Chair vs. Traditional Clothes Chair: A Before/After View
To visualize the difference, imagine your current setup compared with a Laundry Chair system.
The key difference isn’t just aesthetics—it’s that the Laundry Chair nudges you toward micro‑decisions about what you wear, what you wash, and what you keep out, instead of letting everything blend into one overwhelming pile.
Backing the Laundry Chair on Kickstarter: Practical Considerations
As of March 2026, the Laundry Chair is available via Kickstarter, which means it’s still a crowdfunded product rather than a mass‑market retail item. That comes with both excitement and caveats.
Things to Check Before You Back
- Estimated delivery date and any past updates about manufacturing or delays.
- Materials and dimensions to be sure it fits your space and use case.
- Assembly requirements, especially if you have mobility or dexterity limitations.
- Return/refund policy or what happens if the project doesn’t meet its goals.
Kickstarter isn’t a traditional store; backing a project involves some risk that timelines may shift or details may change. The upside is helping bring a genuinely thoughtful, niche product into the world.
If You Can’t Get the Laundry Chair: Low‑Tech Alternatives
Even if you don’t back the Kickstarter or it’s not available in your region, you can still borrow the core design principles to tame your own laundry chair.
Try one of these DIY approaches:
- Tiered hooks or pegs on the wall near your bed to separate “wear again,” “gym,” and “air out” items.
- Stacking stools or small shelves that act as horizontal “layers” rather than a single dumping ground.
- A freestanding valet stand for your next‑day outfit plus one or two half‑worn pieces.
The goal is the same: fewer piles, more intentional layers, and a designated home for in‑between clothes.
Learn More and Next Steps
To explore the Laundry Chair further, including pricing, exact design details, and current shipping estimates, visit:
- The Verge’s coverage of the Laundry Chair on Kickstarter
- The official Laundry Chair Kickstarter page (search “Simone Giertz Laundry Chair Kickstarter” in your browser for the latest live link and campaign updates).
From here, you might:
- Decide whether the Laundry Chair fits your budget, space, and habits.
- Start practicing a mini two‑minute nightly reset with your current chair, so the transition is easy.
- Try a simple layered system with hooks or stools if you’re not ready to buy anything new.
You don’t have to become a perfectly tidy person overnight. By giving your half‑worn clothes a real home—whether that’s Simone Giertz’s Laundry Chair or a DIY setup—you’re already taking a meaningful step toward a calmer, more functional space.