You might mean 'clothes' instead of 'cloths', in that case: If the case is washing with machine, doing laundry in other words, it would be 'ifuku wo sentaku shiteimasu'. If you mean just washing in general meaning it would be 'ifuku wo araimasu'.
If by chance you actually mean 'cloth', like a piece of fabric or material, you can replace 'ifuku' with 'nuno' in either of the sentences above that matches your inquiry.
Washing-up is 皿洗い (sara-arai) in Japanese.
洗剤 senzai
to wash your cloths
Washing machine in Japanese is sentakuki. The Kanji for it is 洗濯機
They washed their cloths by hand until the wringer washing machine was invented
youracist they wear the same cloths we do like hoodys and jeans.
Laundry refers to the process of washing, drying, and folding clothes and other textiles to keep them clean and fresh. It involves using water, detergent, and sometimes specialized techniques to remove dirt and stains from fabrics.
You do that when you wash you cloths by walking through a car wash fully dressed.
in 1950 my mom used an electric washing machine.
It is 'sentakuki.'
dry cleaning is a process of cleaning clothes without the use of water
Washing clothes is a physical change, not a chemical change. The dirt and stains on the clothes are being physically removed, but the molecular structure of the clothes remains the same.