
"The $1100 Laundry Chair includes a rotating rail that can swivel around the seat on a ball-bearing Lazy Susan, allowing laundry to be slung over it without covering the armrests or seating pad. The chair also features a solid hardwood frame and comes with green cotton corduroy upholstery, with a second color option expected in the future."
"The moving rail serves several purposes. It makes it easier to stack clothes and then partially conceal that messy view behind the back of the chair for one, but also allows semi-worn fabric to breathe better than it would in a crumpled pile or stored away, helping to reduce moisture, wrinkles, and smells."
"I made the Laundry Chair because I was tired of staring at my pile of half-dirty clothes. So I decided to make a chair that's actually built for the job."
The Laundry Chair, designed by viral inventor Simone Giertz, solves the common problem of clothes piles on furniture. Priced at $1100, it features a rotating rail mounted on a ball-bearing Lazy Susan that swivels around the seat, allowing clothes to be draped without covering armrests or the seating pad. The chair includes a solid hardwood frame and green cotton corduroy upholstery, with additional colors planned. The rotating rail enables better air circulation for semi-worn clothes, reducing moisture, wrinkles, and odors compared to traditional piles. Early Kickstarter backers receive discounts up to $200, with estimated delivery in November 2026. Giertz developed the prototype for a YouTube video before launching it through her Yetch product brand.
Read at The Verge
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