Clean up dirty clothes
Dirty clothes sit there reminding you, but the smell and feel make you want to avoid them entirely. The visual support below breaks the route to the laundry basket into steps that do not require staring at the pile.
♂Boy puts clothes in laundry basket
A boy puts dirty clothes into a laundry basket.
About this visual support
Dirty clothes reach the brain through two channels at once: you see them and you smell them. Socks by the bed, a t-shirt on the bathroom floor, gym clothes that smell like the gym. The combination is exactly what keeps them lying there. It is not laziness, it is the body steering away from something unpleasant, so you walk around the pile instead of toward it.
Visual support helps by never asking the child to stare at the heap. The first card shows a basket or bag being fetched, the second shows clothes dropped in without folding, the third shows the basket carried to the laundry room or machine. No demand to smell anything, no demand to sort colors, just move. A child who hates the feel of dirty fabric can keep a plastic bag between hand and clothes, and the image confirms that is fine.
One concrete tip: keep the laundry basket visible in the room where clothes usually end up, not behind a closet door. The distance between floor pile and basket often decides whether it gets done. In Routined you can add a short laundry-day routine so the clothes do not sit there a full week before they move.