Category: Organizing Ideas

  • Laundromat Savings

    Laundromat Savings

     

    Saving On Laundry

    Hi there. I love your website and have shared it with LOTS of people in Roseburg, OR and anywhere else I might meet someone that could benefit from your advice and expertise. THANK YOU :)

    I just wanted to share that my family and I (husband and 4 children plus one more on weekends) live in a small apartment with no washing machine or dryer. They do have a small room with laundry facilities on site but we can’t afford the cost for the amount of laundry we do! I have an arrangement with a good friend of ours to clean her house in return for using her washer and dryer.

    This works out very well for us. I wash in the morning and clean up her house, which takes about 30 minutes to an hour (each day during the week but not weekends), and then swing back by later in the day and dry the clothes. Then I go pick up the kids from school.

    This arrangement not only saves me TONS of money but it also saves my friend money and time because she doesn’t have to spend so much time cleaning. I admit I do not do a perfect job cleaning her whole house. I merely sweep and mop 1-2 days a week, load or unload her dishwasher and wipe everything down. I also take the time to fold any laundry she has in the dryer or sitting around and do her laundry (if she has any). I wish that more people could pull together to share resources in this way… -Cati

    Thanks for the idea, Cati. I agree that sharing resources does help. I do this with my grown kids all the time. I do all of Tawra’s ironing and they do my yard work. For a while I didn’t have a washer or dryer so I would go to my son’s home and do my laundry and, like you, I cleaned or folded their clothes.

    My neighbor and I do this, too. I needed a very tall ladder to pick my apples and in exchange I gave her apples and helped her to make apple pies. I babysit her dog and she takes me to lunch. 

    It really is a great way to do things. Often I think we do this with out really realizing we are. It just boils down to friends and neighbors helping each other out, which is a great way to do things!

           -Jill

     

  • A Most Wonderful Treasure

    A Most Wonderful Treasure

    How Pleasant Is Your Home?

    I read a lot of Grace Livingston Hill books and in one of them she refers to a woman’s home and her responsibility in the home. She said the responsibility was "to make it pleasant for those to whom she had been given."

    I really started thinking about those words. I was to make my home pleasant for those whom I had been given. My home (husband and/or children too) are special gifts and treasures that have been given to me too. I wonder how often we disappoint God because we abuse and neglect those treasures that He has given us after having faith and confidence that we would take care of them and treasure them in the same way He does.

    If we were given precious jewels, we would polish them, store them to protect them from nicks and tarnishing and see that they were carefully maintained. We wouldn’t allow them to become buried and forgotten under piles of dirt and dust and stuff. Do we care for our homes and families in the same way we would care for a treasure– by making sure they are well maintained and cared for?

    If you give a gift of great value to one of your children, how do you feel when you find it lying out in the rain and weather being neglected? We have all been given a special gift – our homes yet so many of us neglect them or regard them as unimportant.

    It doesn’t matter if that home is small or large, if it is in a great part of town or a not so great part of town. We have a responsibility as women to make our homes pleasant for those we love. Men and children can’t do this. That doesn’t mean they can’t help take care of your home but they don’t have the ability to make a home "pleasant" in the same way that a woman can. Don’t worry guys– you have other very special gifts and jobs we gals don’t have and I am speaking in general terms. I know there are always exceptions.

    Let me give you an example. We just got through painting Tawra’s house. As we were painting it, we were talking about how none of the male members of our family and extended family like to paint. They hate it. A majority of guys don’t like to paint unless it is for profit.

    I said, if left to themselves, I bet most men would never paint one thing (except maybe their cars :):). They couldn’t care less if the walls of a house ever got painted or if curtains were ever put on a window. Most men would probably never put anything on a plate, instead eating their food straight from a can and drinking from a carton.

    Why? Because men think in terms of comfort and necessity and painted walls or curtains don’t fit into either category. Those things only spell unnecessary work and painted walls do not add to their physical comfort at all. Eating out of a can– well that means one less dish to wash.

    That leads to this next statement from the same book  "Home without a woman… was a shell with the spirit gone." We add the spirit to our home. Yes, you can live without painted walls, curtains and decide to eat out of cans but painted walls, curtains and such are what add that spirit to our homes. They are what make a home "pleasant."

    Have you made your home pleasant? Does your family hate having to leave it each morning and can’t wait to get home at the end of the day or do they dread coming home? What kind of spirit is in your home? One of warmth, comfort and joy or is it cold, dirty, tired and unkempt?

    Only you can make a house a home. God has given you a special gift and treasure. Don’t neglect it. Appreciate it and take care of it.

           -Jill

     

    photo by: indieman

  • Natural Way To Unclog a Drain – How To Clear A Drain

    Natural Way To Unclog a Drain – How To Clear A Drain

    Here’s a quick, easy and natural way to unclog a drain using ingredients you already have at home! This method easily takes care of most clogs in minutes! (more…)

  • Fall Decorations

    Fall Decorations

    homemade fall decorations

    Here are a couple of pictures of mom’s falls decorations.

    She made the rake (it says "Free Leaves – Rake All You Want") for $0 using stuff she already had. I made the pumpkin guys in the back a couple of years ago. It was easy and cost me $0 because I already had the stuff.

    Mom went to put  up a funny witch one year and the silly thing kept falling down as she was hanging it. She finally got frustrated and left it on the ground until she could figure out what to do.

    homemade decorations halloween wizard of oz witch

    She then decided to just leave it and add a "water" bucket like the Wizard of Oz when the witch was melted with water! Great idea! (And so much easier)

          -Tawra

     

  • Are microfiber cloths worth the cost?

    Are microfiber cloths worth the cost?

    Are micro fiber cloths worth the cost?

    In my series on rags and how to save on paper towels, I was asked about microfiber cloths and if they save money.

    I don’t really consider microfiber cloths "rags" because you have to buy them. I know a lot of people have had success with them. They aren’t bad, but to be honest I really like my diapers and flour sack towels better. Even though they say that microfiber rags never streak, I find that very often they do.

    Plus at in some cases they don’t seem to absorb as well. I have a microfiber hair wrap and it doesn’t work near as well as a regular towel. I am a little confused about microfiber because they use it on furniture to repel stains and liquid so how can the same type of thing work in a rag? I don’t know the answer to that.

    The main problem with them though is I have to baby them so much when I use them. If I use them to dust, I don’t want to put them in with my other clothes to wash. Even if I decide to wash microfiber cloths with my other things, I can’t put them in with my darks or lights because I use fabric softener in those loads. I don’t use softener in my whites, but I do use Clorox, so I can’t put them in with those. I don’t want to wash a load of 6-10 small rags every week. To me that is a waste, especially when my good old rags do the same thing and I can just toss them in with the whites or throw them out.

    People talk about buying microfiber cloths to save the environment but look what manufacturing them is probably doing to the environment. Compare that to a rag you already have on hand that has already been used for something else and it saves you money. I have a feeling microfiber rags may end up being like bottled water. It was the rage and thought to be so much better for you for years but now they find that it is expensive and some people say the plastic is bad for you. Go figure.

    I will keep using my good old rags, but if your microfiber rags work for you, keep using them.

    Jill

     

    photo by: newlivinghouston

  • Crocheted Rag Rugs

    Crocheted Rag Rugs

    rag rug crochet

    We have recently been asked how to actually make a crocheted rag rug. It would be easier to show you, but I’m not able to make a video right now, so I did some checking. These videos are the best I could come up with for the moment. The first two are for a crocheted rug and the last is for what is called a toothbrush rug which is easy to make if you don’t know how to knit or crochet. If you have any questions, be sure to ask.

    Jill

    Toothbrush Rugs – Complete Video Instructions (Part 1 – Beginners)

     

    Photo By: katerha

  • Inexpensive Bedroom Makeover

    Inexpensive Bedroom Makeover

    Elly's Room Before Room Makeover

    Before
    Elly's Room After Room Makeover
    After

     

    By shopping at thrift stores and making do with what I had, I spent under $40 redecorating my daughter’s room. I saved almost $200 over purchasing everything at full retail. I had forgotten to take a “before” picture before I started painting. The room had a dirty beige color on the walls that I’ve hated since we moved in three years ago. We kept thinking we would move so I never messed with fixing the room up.

    I finally decided that since it was almost Elly’s birthday I would go ahead and decorate her new room. (She and BJ used to share a room and we had just moved David in with BJ, giving Elly her own room.)

    It took me about one day to put the paint on the walls. (That’s with the help of a 3 year old.)

    To redecorate, we designed the room around a comforter that Elly had received from her grandmother as a gift.

    We purchased everything from the thrift store over 2 weeks. We had to go about 3-4 times, but it was well worth the savings.

    We used a hook to hang the canopy and an ironed sheet to get the color for the wall.

    I needed to have some color on the wall so the canopy would stand out, but by the time I figured that out, I was too worn out to do any more painting. I found a twin sheet that I had on hand that I had purchased for $1 at the thrift store. I was originally going to use the sheet for something else but never did.

    I ironed the sheet and then used the staple gun to staple it up on the wall. I stapled five staples along the top and three down each side.

    Then I put a hook, which we had on hand, in the ceiling for the canopy. I hung the canopy and then tied it by gathering it and stapling the gather. Then we stapled a tassel on the gather. We found the tassels for $.12 each on clearance after Christmas.

    We used boxes of books to raise Elly's bed to give her a "Princess and the Pea" high bed.

    We Used Book Boxes To Raise The Bed.

    Elly wanted a tall princess bed, so we took identical sized boxes of books from the garage and put one under each leg. We removed the wheels from the bed frame. Then we put a board on top of the boxes for stability. Elly’s bed frame is now about 15 inches feet off the ground. The top of the mattress comes up to her chest. She just loved the tall bed!

    This also made it convenient to use the space under the bed for storing her toys.

    My mom made some pillows to go with Elly’s comforter from material she already had. The long pink bolster was the one thing we bought retail. That was some new “extra fluffy soft” material that she purchased for about $5 for one extra special pillow.

    I found a picture at the store to put on the wall behind her bed instead of a headboard.

    We didn’t have any night stands that would work, so we stacked three boxes of books in the corner and one box in front to make a staggered “L” shaped night stand. We covered the boxes by layering a white sheet and then lace on top. She now has a nice place for her drinking cup, clock and stuffed animals.

    I couldn’t find curtains to match and didn’t have any material to make any so I had to come up with something else. After moving so much, I’m sick of making curtains anyway. I found a white round tablecloth that I had. I ironed it, folded it in half and then draped it over her curtain rod. Then I took some fake flowers that I already had and put them on top. It turned out pretty nice for a free curtain!

     

    I used a tablecloth with some flowers for a curtain like window dressingA Dresser along with a free standing mirror

    We thought Elly would enjoy a free standing mirror and I found a nice heavy duty one for $5 at the thrift store. There were two things wrong with it. It didn’t have a base and the person had painted it black, inadvertently getting spray paint on the glass. Polish remover took off the paint in a just a couple of seconds and we simply leaned the mirror against the wall in the corner.

    I created a craft area with a table for her to do crafts, a fancy chair and a corkbpard to display her art.

    Elly likes crafts and we thought she would appreciate a craft area. We used a table that the neighbors had left on the curb. It was pretty ugly, so we covered it with a tablecloth that looked nice but wouldn’t be too big of a loss if she spilled something on it. Mom had a chair that was the right size, but it looked bad, too. She took some lace and tied the corners. Then she put a cluster of flowers on the back.

    We also thought she needed something to hang all her art projects on. I found a corkboard that was in good shape, but had been marked up with markers, pens and crayons. I tried painting it with latex paint but the marker marks kept bleeding through. I took the blow dryer and dried the paint. (I was doing this at 9:00 p.m. the night before her birthday and really wanted to get it done and go to bed.) I took the glue gun and hot glued some lace over the top of the cork material to cover up the marks. The paint showed through the lace but the lace covered up the marker marks.

    Elly had been telling me that she wanted to decorate with hearts and stars, so I took a large car washing sponge ($.75 each at Dollar General) and cut stencils out of them. I found heart and star coloring pages on the Internet and when I printed them, they were just the right size. I traced the heart and star on two sponges and then took a razor blade and cut out the edges. I only went down about ½ inch with the cut to remove the excess sponge. Then I put paint on the sponge and pressed it onto the wall. The sponge didn’t stamp the image as well as I would have liked, so I painted over the top of the mark my stencil had made with a paintbrush.

    Elly’s new room took me two days work and about 15-30 minutes at a time, resting about 1-2 hours in between. I was really sick those two days or I would have been able to complete it in one day.

    We were able to keep Elly out of the room while I did it so she didn’t really know what was going on in there. On the day of her birthday, I put a large sheet of wrapping paper over her doorframe and wrote Happy Birthday with a marker and bows. That way she could open her “present” from mom and dad. She was very excited about it!

    Before

    child's bedroom makeover after

    After

     

    Here’s what we spent on this room makeover:

    Canopy-$5
    Bed skirt-$3
    Mirror-$5
    Pictures for walls-$5
    Corkboard-$2
    Tassels-$0.24 for 2
    Paint and supplies-$14

     

  • 5 Minutes to Organized

    5 Minutes to Organized

    Hi I really appreciated reading how to clean and organize in 5 minutes. Timing yourself to do tasks is a great idea – I never thought about it quite in that way.

    I have done something similar – for example, if I am waiting for something to heat up in the microwave (my coffee) – I think to myself that I have “found” 1 minute to do something – so I clean the front of the microwave, or take the rubbish out – some little chore rather than standing there watching the coursel go round. 

    It almost becomes a little game – gee – it only took me x seconds to do that. Also, I use ad breaks – another slot of “found” time.  When I have stuff to do, I will watch a TV program, and the start of the ads is my signal to get up and do a little chore.  For example, I might have the dish washing to do (I don’t own a dishwasher), so in the first ad break, I run the water and put the glasses in to soak.  In the next break, I wash the glasses and put the plates in to soak and so on.  It’s amazing how much gets done.  Or, you can do a little bit of dusting or vacuuming in the break.

    Cheers for now Kate in Cleveland, Queensland, Australia

     

    Hello Kate,

    I love to hear from our readers from down under. As a matter of fact I am reading yet another book that is set in Australia. I just love to read about your country.

    I did the same type of thing you mentioned when I was really sick. I couldn’t clean the whole bathroom but I would make myself get up and clean the sink during the first 5 minute TV commercial and then the toilet during the next. That way I didn’t over do but at the same time I manage to get huge amounts done. I totally agree with what you said. Thanks, Jill

     

  • Where do I get cleaning rags? Save on paper towels, part 2

    Where do I get cleaning rags? Save on paper towels, part 2

    cleaning rags save money on paper towels

    How to Save on Paper Towels, Part 2

    Where to get cleaning rags and how to use them

    This post about cleaning rags is part 2 of How To Save Money On Paper Towels.

    The average person usually has plenty of rags to use for cleaning rags or cleaning towels from their own clothing and linens- things that can no longer be used or worn. If you need more, ask friends or family members to save you some. If you still don’t have enough, check out garage sales or thrift stores.

    When using clothing to make cleaning rags, be sure to cut off all buttons, zippers and other accessories because these will scratch while they are cleaning.

    Never use any material like polyester, nylon or other man made materials for cleaning rags. I do use these for other things, but not for rags. Anything that is 100% cotton works well. Also, very heavy fabric like jean material will not work for rags. It isn’t as absorbent and it’s not flexible enough.

    Here are some examples of what to use to make cleaning rags and how to use them:

     

    Towels, washrags, or anything terry cloth

    All of these items make great cleaning rags. The only bad thing about them is that you can’t easily cut them down to a smaller size because they fray and fuzz really badly when you do.

    • These are good for soaking up spills. If someone spills a glass of water or splatters water all over the walls, if you need to dry the dog or if you have something like a clean trash can that you want to dry quickly, go for a rag towel.
    • If I need to give something a good scrubbing I grab a rag wash cloth, particularly to scrub something like my patio table and chairs.
    • I keep a rag hand towel or washrag by my ironing board to wipe off the bottom of my iron or wipe up the water that sometimes spills when I am filling it.
    • I use cleaning rags to wash down the kids’ toys and the dog and cat bowl (not the same rag for the toys and cat bowl, of course!).
    • This type of rag is great to put under the dog’s water bowl if he is messy.
    • Use old towels for the kids to stand on when they come in from the pool or sprinkler dripping wet to reduce the mess.
    • Terry cloth works great for drying your car.

     

    T-shirts, undies and socks

    These are my wimpy cleaning rags. That doesn’t mean I don’t like them– they just aren’t good for heavy duty cleaning jobs. These are usually my throw away cleaning rags because I get so many more of them than other ones and, by the time they make it to the rag bag, they are getting pretty thin.

    • I use old t-shirts for really nasty jobs like washing out my trash can, washing the bathroom floor, animal accidents and car grease clean-ups.
    • If I have to run a rag along my clothesline to quickly clean it or wipe out a plastic laundry basket, I’ll use this type of rag.
    • If I run out of flannel cleaning rags and I’m in a pinch, I will use a t-shirt for something like my Swiffer. I double or triple them and mist with water or spray with floor polish.
    • Socks are especially good for dusting rags. You can just slip them over your hand if you want. I don’t usually do this because I use all sides of my sock. I use the front and back and then turn it inside out and use the front and back again. Using it this way, I only need one sock for a normal weekly dusting for the whole house.

     

    Flannel shirts and pajamas

    Anything flannel is nice because flannel is a little thicker than t-shirts but not as thick as terry cloth so flannel is a great thickness for a cleaning rag. Flannel works well for a lot of things. The only drawback is that if you use it to scrub a rough surface, it will leave lint behind.

    • I mostly use flannel with my Swiffer for hardwood floors. I mist it with a little water or, if I have it, floor polish. Don’t use regular furniture polish because it will make the floor too slick. If you don’t have polish just save and use a little water.
    • Flannel is also good when you need to polish things like brass or silver.
    • If it is a large flannel sheet, see “sheets” below for other ideas.

     

    Old cloth diapers and flour sack tea towels

    These are my all time favorites. I can hardly wait for my flour sack towels to wear out so I can use them for cleaning towels and I will beg borrow and steal for old cloth diapers (not pre-folded ones but regular ones). The more expensive the diaper, the better they seem to work a cleaning rags. Diapers last forever. I was just using the last of the ones I had from my own kids when my grandkids came along and I got to replenish my supply.

    These cleaning towels do what all the other rags do put together, but I don’t use them for my dirty jobs because they are harder for me to find. I wash and re-wash them and I can bleach them as often as I need to in order to reuse them.

    • I use the diapers in my bathroom for drying the faucets and shower walls after I clean them. Then I dampen it slightly and wipe down my mirror. I never buy window cleaner to use in my bathroom.
    • There is nothing like cloth diapers for cleaning mirrors, glass on hanging pictures, or windows. When I use them on something like the outside of a dirty window, I clean the window with soapy water and a washrag first. Then I dry and polish it with a diaper.
    • Cloth diaper rags also work nicely for shining and drying the car windows after you wash it.
    • They are great for any place you want a shine, like on stainless steel appliances, and they don’t leave any lint.
    • Keep an old flour sack towel by your ironing board for a pressing cloth.
    • I have trouble with regular washrags because they’re too harsh on my faceand I don’t like to wash with just my hands. Instead, I take well used flour sack towels, cut them into squares and hem. Then I have a super soft cloth to use for my face.

      Years ago, people didn’t buy washrags or dishrags. They would just cut and hem a piece of old clothing or something to use; hence the name washrag and dishrag. They would be shocked to know that we now pay for cloths to wash our dishes and faces.

     

    Sheets

    Sheets are not very good for cleaning rags. They are too slick and don’t absorb very well, except for flannel sheets. Sheets make great rags for so many things other than cleaning that I felt I should include them.

    • For you quilters, cut the wide top hem off of a top sheet and use it for a sleeve on the back of your quilt when you want to hang it on a rod.
    • Sometimes sheets just wear in the middle. You can often sew a couple of pillow cases from the sides and save any “scrapes” for some of the other things I list here.
    • Cut down a large sheet to use for crib or bassinet sheet.
    • I tear my very worn and ugly sheets in 1-2 inch wide strips to use like rope or string. I just cut to about 1/4 inch through the hem of the sheet at one to two inch intervals and then tear. You don’t need to measure or be exact. This is just a general guideline. One may be three inches and another might be an inch and a half. It really doesn’t matter. You just need strips. I don’t know what I would do without my sheet strips.

      Here are some things I do with my strips:

      • Tie bundles of limbs together for the trash man.
      • Tie my water hose together to store for the winter.
      • I had a fold up table whose legs kept falling, so I tied those up.
      • I roll and tie bundles of batting.
      • I use them for sleeping bags when their ties get broken.
      • I roll and tie my down comforter to put away for the winter.
      • When moving, I tie rods and curtain rods together.
      • After I roll a large area rug to store, I’ll tie it with sheet strips.
      • Tails for kites
      • Tying up all kinds of things in the garden.

      If I am going to need more strength, like when I am holding a large bundle of limbs or a large rug together, I will use double the amount.

    • Use an old sheet for a painting drop cloth. Sometimes I double them to be extra careful so the paint doesn’t leak through.
    • If they are 100% cotton and in pretty good shape, but I can’t use them as sheets anymore, I will use them to back my quilts (no, not my heirloom quilts but the everyday ones).
    • When making a slipcover, instead of buying muslin to use for a pattern, use an old sheet. If you are sewing expensive material for an outfit, you might want to do a trial run out of a sheet first.
    • Keep an old sheet rolled up in the trunk of your car to spread on a picnic table or on the ground for a picnic.
    • If the sheet isn’t worn, but it’s just not the right color anymore, dye it the color you want. You can do this with towels too.

    How to cut up cleaning rags

    When cutting a rag, you want to consider what you are going to use it for. For example, if I am going to use a rag as a dust rag I will cut it big enough so I can fold it in fourths and still have a 5-6 inch square (about). This way I can keep refolding as I dust which give me 8 sides to clean with instead of just 2. This is a good professional cleaner’s tip on using any of your cleaning rags. Fold in fourths and keep refolding as you clean.

    Cutting rags is great watching TV work and you can get the kids to do it too.

     

    Here are some examples of how to do cut up rags to make cleaning rags:

    T shirts

    1. I cut off the sleeves.If it is a long sleeve, I’ll cut each sleeve in half. For dusting, I’d leave them as-is. If you are going to use them for small jobs, you might want to cut them in half again.
      • When using a sleeve, be sure to use each side and turn inside out. Use each side like you do when cleaning with a sock rag.
    2. Next I cut the sides and shoulder seams open and then cut the neck band off.
    3. Last, I cut them into the size of squares or rectangles I want. This isn’t rocket science. I just eyeball it. It’s only a rag. If you ruin it you can toss it, so relax.

    Towels

    Don’t cut towels. Terry cloth frays very badly so it is best to just leave these and use wash rags for small jobs and the towels for big ones.

    Note from Tawra: I keep a stack of old towels in my car and in my emergency shelter. Then if we are in an accident or tornado, someone gets hurt and there is a lot of blood we can clean it up easier. 

    Cloth diapers and tea towels

    Even though you can cut these, I usually don’t. They’re better as cleaning towels. For example when I am washing windows, I use a corner to dry or shine and then move to another dry corner or the middle. By moving from one dry spot on the rag to the next, I can get a whole job done with one cleaning towel.

    Pajamas

    1. Like the T shirts, I cut the sleeves first, long sleeves in half.
    2. Then cut side and shoulder seams.
    3. Cut off buttons to save.
    4. Cut the front band and collar off. Often the collar is big enough to save and use for a small wipe up job.
    5. Cut into squares or rectangles.

    If I am going to use these cleaning rags for something like my Swiffer, I will measure and cut one for a pattern and use it as a guideline to cut more. Even these don’t have to be perfect. It is just to give you a general idea.

    Relax, you’re just working with rags. If I have a drawer full of cleaning rags that are too big for the job at hand, I grab a pair of scissors and cut one down to the size I need. It is not big deal and it doesn’t have to be perfect.

    Don’t feel guilty about throwing away cleaning rags.  I do it all the time and I do it guilt free. :) No wonder so many people are so stressed and uptight all the time. We can’t even throw out a paper cup or use a piece of aluminum without being badgered or made to feel guilty. Rags are one thing you can throw out guilt free because, if you are like me, you have used it well in the form of clothing or linens and re-used it as a rag until it’s pretty much worn out. Not only that, since I bought most of the things I wear used, my things have really been used by the time they hit the trash.

          -Jill

     

    For even more tip to save money on organizing, cleaning and laundry, take a look at our How To Organize And Clean Your Home e-books.

     

    Photo By: stevendepolo

  • Kids’ Chore Chart

    Kids’ Chore Chart

    Here is a list showing how I break down the household chores. Organization is essential in effectively maintaining your household. If you develop a plan and stick to your schedule, it will prevent the work from building up too much. If you do a little each day, you will not become overwhelmed and frustrated. (more…)

  • Cleaning Tips

    Cleaning Tips

    • Keep a toothbrush by your kitchen sink to clean things like graters, choppers, mixer beaters and openers. You will be surprised how often you grab it to use on hard to clean places.
    • Take care of all your small appliances. It really does help them last longer.
    • Clean your coffee pot once in a while. Pour 1/2 to 1 cup of vinegar into it and run it through as if you were making coffee. Repeat a couple of times using the same vinegar.
    • Pour 1/4 cup baking soda down your drain. Then pour the used vinegar from the coffee maker down the drain. Let it sit for a minute or so. Next, pour 1-2 pots of water through the coffee maker to wash out the vinegar. When each pot of rinse water from the coffee maker is done, pour it into the drain. You now have a clean coffee pot and a clean drain.
    • When you are buying containers to store anything in the freezer, fridge or cabinets, always remember that square ones stack better than round ones.
    • Screw a cup hook close to your sink to hang your rings and watch. Make such it isn’t in a spot where it could accidentally be knocked down the drain!
    • If your dishwasher is near your sink, place a small plastic basket (one like strawberries comes in) in the corner of your dishwasher and store things like your dish brush, scrubbing pads and sponges in it. This way, they won’t drip everywhere. You can also use a twist tie to tie the basket into the dishwasher so the things can stay in there and run through your washing cycle when you do your dishes. If you have a big enough silverware holder just keep them in there.
    • When rinsing dairy products or starches (cheese, eggs, milk, rice, pasta, potatoes) from your dishes, use cold water. Hot water sets them and makes them harder to get off. Hot water is best for greasy items.

     

    For more helpful tips to make organizing, cleaning and laundry easier, take a look at our How To Organize And Clean Your Home e-books.

     

    photo by: quinnanya

  • Tarnish Remover

    Tarnish Remover

    1/2 cup – 1 cup baking soda or Borax
    aluminum pan (no substitutions)

    Place aluminum pan in the sink and add your sterling or plated silver. Add enough baking soda or borax to cover silverware. Pour boiling water to cover the utensils. When the tarnish disappears, remove silverware and buff with a soft cotton cloth.

    From: Dining on a Dime

     

  • Organizing Tips

    Organizing Tips

    • On those exhausting days or the days when you’re too late getting home to fix dinner, have a breakfast night and let each person pick their own favorite frozen breakfast food . If you have the strength, fry some ham or bacon and cut up some fresh fruit .
    • Anyone who works in an office knows the best way to get a good start on the next day is to leave your desk clear that evening before you go home. The same goes at home. If you want a good start to your day, make sure your kitchen sink is empty, the counters are clear and the table is cleared off and wiped.

     

    photo by: kitchendesigner

  • The Effect of Architecture on Home Living

    The Effect of Architecture on Home Living

    Mom and I have always had “issues” with our houses. I always kept thinking I wasn’t content with what I had because every house I lived in has never worked for me and I was always trying to think of ways to get it to work better. I keep trying to make due with what I have and am always frustrated! Everyone kept saying that I needed less stuff but I use a good portion of the stuff I have so why should I get rid of it? I have a horrible time keeping clutter under control but that’s only because I have no where to put things. (meaning no storage cabinets or closets)

    The Effect of Architecture On Home Living

    Mom and I have real issues with modern houses too. We will go to these open houses for brand new “family” homes and think things like:

    Why do they have a laundry room so small that you can barely turn around in it and then you have to fold clothes on the couch?

    Why is the teeny tiny laundry “room” on the way from the garage into the house and you have to step over everything to get out the door?  Why is it in the middle of the hallway or kitchen? Why is it downstairs and all the bedrooms upstairs?

    Why is there no mud room and shoes and backpacks are dumped by the front door?

    Why is it that you can’t even open your car door in a 2 car garage and easily get out the kids and groceries?

    Why do you have to hike across half the house to haul the groceries?

    Why is there no linen or storage closets? Where do you put things like family games, holiday decorations etc.? Where do you store the vacuum and the broom and mop?

    Right now Mike and I are looking for a new house and with EVERY house I have to think “can I change this bedroom into a laundry room?”  “Can I move the patio doors so the eat in kitchen won’t have a chair knocking the glass door at each meal?” “Where can I add more cabinets for storage space?” etc.

    Well, mom found this article by Lydia Sherman at Home Living and it expressed EVERYTHING we have been feeling! (I almost fell over when I read the last paragraphs, it was like she read my mind!) She very kindly allowed us to re-print it on our site for you. I hope you will enjoy it and please head over to Home Living and read her comments on designing a house after you are done! ! It’s a long read but if you have always had problems with your house then if it’s the only thing you read this week please read this!!!!! Tawra (who is going to going to the house construction business!)

    The Effect of Architecture on Home Living

    by Lydia Sherman
    from HomeLiving.com

    Americans wonder why their houses lack charm…charm is dependent on connectedness, on continuities, on the relation of one thing to another..”
    “Houses have become utterly charmless, lacking in the capacity to inspire…”
    “The finest Gothic dwellings were sheer enchantments, passports to another place and time.” (The above quotes are also included in the next to last chapter of Linda Lichter’s book on Victorian life, “Simple Social Graces” or “The Benevolence of Manners.” Both titles are the same text)

    I will begin by saying that I never felt as isolated, restless, trapped or jailed in the log home built by my father and mother in the wilderness (you can see photographs of it in my book, “Just Breathing the Air.”) My parents, with no architectural training, knew what they wanted in a house that would be a home and they managed to put it there using their instincts. I never felt so lonely, and I never felt overwhelmed with housework and storage space (even in a family of 9) in that simple two story house, as I did thereafter when I began living in the modern neighborhoods. After my son in law began to uncover the schemes behind modern architecture, both my daughter and I began to understand why these houses had such a debilitating effect on our lives. Here, I will attempt to explain.

    The homestead, as isolated and primitive as it was, was humming with activity and life. It was a real home, with windows overlooking the scenery. We slept upstairs where the heat collected from the wood stove, and where we felt safe from intrusion. You can see diagrams of the floor plan in my book. It had no matching appliances but there was always a feeling in it that I could never produce in the modern tract home. There was always someone coming down the home road to see us, whether it was the mail delivery with a package, or a neighbor. Even a bill collector got invited in for a cup of coffee. There seemed to be never a dull moment and even the quiet times were fulfilling.

    In comparison, my experience in modern housing was quite the opposite. At first I was excited, after so far away for so long. I thought I would be around people and that there would be more interaction, but I did not see people. Instead, I saw the back of their cars as they left their houses. If I did have company, I had to be careful that visitors did not park in neighbor areas and that we did not disturb the neighborhood in any way. Neighbors were not neighborly and everything was impersonal. I woke up to bleakness I’d never known before, and many other homemakers said the same thing. Part of this was due to the modern architectural planning of houses and neighborhoods. The homemakers eventually went to work, as the isolation of these neighborhoods was just too much for them. The neighborhoods and houses seemed to be designed to make people want to leave home.

    I want to congratulate the 20th and 21st century homemakers who really made homes and conducted good family lives inside these limited houses. They overcame the worst odds and embellished them, sometimes adding gates, dormers, porches, columns, window boxes, shutters, gardens and windows, and other architectural salvage, in order to transform them with life and beauty. They created doorways and arches and all kinds of things to make the house memorable, and even inspire artists. All over the web I see these make-overs and I have to say to the modern architect who embraced these (what I call “prison designs”) styles, that these women overcame the limitations and did a greater job than the Victorian women even had to, in order to make the homes livable. The women who make these “shabby shacks,” which had no architectural advantages, into livable homes are to be congratulated. In this respect, they had more fortitude and determination than any Victorian woman ever had to have.

    The 20th century “progressives” (often referred to as modernists) sought to throw off authority and restraint and basic principles in just about everything. They rebelled against the manners and the sensibilities of their Victorian parents and grandparents, and attempted to make it fashionable to strip everything of its outer facade. They ended up with buildings minus entry ways and embellishments, clothing without structure, art without beauty, music and poetry without rhythm, meter or even sense, literature laced with despair, and religion without good foundations.

    One such person happened to be the granddaughter of Catherine Beecher. Catherine herself, of whom I have previously written of in this blog, was a Victorian, who thought homes should be light and airy and friendly to the home maker. Her granddaughter, a twentieth century modernist, wrote in her rebellion, ” We are, after all, just animals. All we need is stalls to live in.”
    She advocated plain houses with no view and no furniture and no embellishments or color. Her rebellious writings made me wonder if she was just trying to get out of keeping house.

    I have discussed at length in previous articles at the Lady Lydia Speaks column at LAF, the effect of the rejection of responsible moral principles on art, showing an example of art from the 19th century which was easily recognizable, and comparing it to a piece from the 20th century with only black scribbles on it. Today I would like to compare the 20th century architecture that we had to live in, with the homes of our Victorian parents and grandparents.

    Have a look at the old Victorian neighborhoods. You can take a drive around the streets of almost any town and see the years go by: Victorian, 1920’s bungalows, 1930’s and 40’s wartime homes, 1950’s homes, and then the 60’s and 70’s….you can identify them by their style. Usually there are several streets that begin in the 1800’s and then after a few blocks you can see the next century. One thing that stands out supreme in the Victorian neighborhoods, even in the crowded row houses of some towns, is that each “Victorian” is different in style and color, making it very interesting. As I said, Victorian wasn’t really a style of its own. It borrowed from many different styles, has many different roofs, porches, gables, pillars and columns, verandas and porches, steps. Each house is different. This explains somewhat why letters could just be addressed to the family, with no number on the street. You could find the house because you knew the Jones or the Smiths lived in the blue Queen Anne next to the yellow Georgian. Compare this to the modern tract homes (the homes built by contractors, squeezed onto a plot of land), are so similar in color and style that it is not easy to identify your friend’s house. I have old post cards that have only the name of the person and the town they live in. I realize the population has grown, which entails a new address system with numbers on the houses, but I do think the tract homes lack that identifying charm that says “this is our HOME. I think it really shows spunk in the 21st century men and women to paint these houses they are stuck with, an identifying color, and add trim and porches to them.

    The Victorians architects were people like Alexander Jackson Davis, and Andrew Jackson Downing. You can tell their mothers admired one of the presidents of the time, Andrew Jackson. I will mention other architects of the time, later on, but these are two that I want to focus on, who had in their minds, cozy homes for families of the 19th century.

    You can read about Alexander Jackson Davis and see some of his designs here
    http://www.fredericklawolmsted.com/ajdowning.htm

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Jackson_Davis

    http://www.amazon.com/Apostle-Taste-1815-1852-Creating-Landscape/dp/0801862574
    A few months ago I found a free online printable book by Davis and Downing, full of lovely family homes, in which he describes how they can be lived in, adding remarks like, “Just plant an apple tree on the side…etc.” I cannot find that book at this time, but it is there, somewhere.

    A.J. Downing, with whom Davis collaborated on a book of houses for common people, said, “There must be nooks and crannies about it, where one would love to linger…cozy rooms where all domestic fireside joys are invited to dwell.” I felt this on the homestead in various corners of the “big house” as we called it. I did not feel it in the modern tract houses.

    The Victorians built up, instead of out. The modernist created the ranch or the “rambler,” which was aptly named, for in it, the homemaker finds herself walking what seems like the length of a ranch, and literally “rambling” all day from one end of the house to the other. What she needs is usually at the end of the house where she is not, and once she gets there she has to walk all the way back, to use it. These houses, though they have ample expanse, have never had the kind of storage spaces women needed in order to keep their homes uncluttered.

    Building out also meant that bedrooms were on the ground level. In my opinion this invited prowlers, and then fear of prowlers caused us to install extra precautions, such as bars on the windows and hedges to block out all scenery. On the ground level, people in bedrooms hear every single noise, from the door rattling in the wind, to a creak in a window at night. In order to escape this uneasy feeling at night, children in those kinds of homes will often forgo the “privilege” of having a room of their own apiece, and choose their parents’ room to sleep in at night.

    The Victorian (which consisted of several popular styles, including Greek Revival, Gothic, Italiante, Farmhouse, Cottage, and more) custom of building UP, did a lot for the property. We complain about there being only breathing space between houses in modern neighborhoods, and that they are little more than glorified apartments when they are so close to the next house. The Victorian homes being built UP meant more out-lying property surrounding the house. In other words, they were not “rambling” all over the place. This meant they were able to use their imagination to create wonderful gardens, like extra “rooms” to sit in, walk in, muse in, pray in, and look on with appreciation.

    Victorian homes were built by husbands and fathers or hired to be built by them, for their beloved wives and daughters and family members. These homes were so loved and valued that they were often handed down through the generations until they literally wore out. It takes a lot of living and a lot of abuse and a century to ruin the Victorian houses, but the modern tract home takes only a few months to destroy with careless living. That is something to think about.

    The modern home was built for quick access. The gardens were not emphasized because the property was created to accommodate what I call in this fast-food era, “fast families,” which will enable them to drive up quickly in their car, alight into the kitchen from the garage, eat, take a shower, and then get ready to go “somewhere else,” paying little attention to the layout and the gardens or anything else in the home. They wouldn’t need to spend much time in it so they wouldn’t notice that there were no architectural interest. After all, it was just for resale value, not a home to be passed to the next generation.

    Lacking porches or balconies, families have no special places to go, so they just want to get out and go somewhere else. It keeps society moving around daily, nightly and yearly, looking for some place they can feel comfortable. Many modern houses are poorly lit, and inadequately heated or cooled. Sometimes they feel more like institutional buildings than homes.

    The architecture of the homes of the 19th century inspires tours of these great houses that have been saved and restored. I wonder how much touring the next generation will do of the modern tract home. I can just hear the guide, saying, “Notice the easy access to this house. They didn’t have to walk down a walkway, and there were no gardens to bother with. The 20th century citizen had all these embellishments removed, including porches and gazebos, so he could concentrate on intellectual things, making money, climbing the career ladder… the doors were hollow, in order to save expense, the roofs were not pitched, because that was an unnecessary affectation. Of course, there was some leakage from the ceiling, but modern water-proofing took care of that. You could just spray it on and eliminate the holes.” Again, I say, with the obviously quick access to the entry of these new houses, I wonder that the architect even bothered with a door. Perhaps it would have been more “efficient” to have the passenger suctioned from the car down a tube straight into a chair in the kitchen, where food would be automatically served.

    Windows of the modern homes I’ve lived in were, more often than not, too high to look out of. Many children grew up without window seats or the pleasure of sitting near a window and just looking outside. The huge plate-glass windows often used in the living rooms, were sometimes a magnate for hot sun, making it impossible to sit in that room in the summer. Breaks in plate glass entails expensive replacements. They paned windows of the Victorian designs were easy to replace, and should one pane be cracked, you could at least tape it up or put a piece of paper in that one pane until it could be replaced. Modern homes do not have enough over-hang of the roofs to create the shade that is needed to shield the home from intense heat and light.

    I once lived in an older home and noticed how thoughtful the design seemed to be. It was as though the architect said, “I know the lady of the house will be writing letters in the morning, and reading her mail, therefore, her desk will go with this window to capture the morning light,” or “if there is an artist in the house, this northern room will be perfect for a little studio.” In the kitchen, a woman could easily step out a door into a little garden to get fresh herbs and vegetables for a soup. In a modern tract home, we often have to walk around to an awkward area and don’t even get there in time to chase away the neighbor’s cat.

    Kitchens in modern homes seem to be merely alley-ways between two points in the house. Someone is always walking through with laundry to put in the laundry room, or coming in from the side door on their way to some other room. This kind of traffic creates more housekeeping, and also more traffic jams. The so-called “efficiency kitchen,” which was designed to reach over and open the fridge, use the stove, and turn on the faucet, in one or two steps, are not efficient when it comes to serving a meal, or working together as a family. The farmhouse kitchens were also the eating areas and provided much more room and made much more sense. Homemakers will understand, I am sure!

    There is much more I can say about the modern home and I will briefly cover some of the other problems. For one, the children’s bedrooms are on the outer areas of the house, which I do not believe is safe. Sometimes they even face the street, and have a street light pouring into the room at night. The Victorian bedrooms were usually upstairs. In upper rooms, it would be more difficult for passers-by to be seen in the window, or for anyone to peek in unless they took a great deal of trouble to get a ladder and risk their neck doing so. Upstairs will collect more heat in winter, as heat rises, and keep the children’s room warmer. Upstairs, you hear fewer noises than when you sleep downstairs, and can rest better. Bathrooms are often put in even stranger areas with no windows for fresh air. Pity the poor person in the tub when the electric current goes off, in one of those modern bathrooms.

    Now let me move on to the neighborhoods that these poor homes were relegated to. It is interesting to see the diabolical design behind “suburbia.” I don’t know if anyone ever has felt, especially if you were born in the 40’s or 50’s, that they don’t feel like they belong to their town, or that their town or neighborhood is no longer like home, or that they just don’t feel it is even their country anymore…well, you are not going crazy. It has something to do with the way houses and neighborhoods of the 20th century were designed.

    First of all, houses had no porches, verandas, steps, walkways, court yards entry ways, parlors,
    or over-hang from the roofs. You arrived at the house and you were suddenly “in.” You have no breathing space, no time for thought, no time for recollection. You are transported rapidly from the train or the car to the inside of the house. Without an entry way to even cause a pause in your breath, there you are, right in the living room, with nowhere to put your hat or coat or bag. I wonder that the architects even took the trouble to put a front door on these houses, since no one uses it. They usually come in through the side door from within the garage. Is it any wonder that people suffer from claustrophobia, panic attacks, depression, and general disturbance of the heart?

    Some of the older homes of the 19th century may look a little bleak at first, but you can imagine that they were once busy places where children had something to do, with spaces that meant something to them. The modern tract home seems to lack this feeling of belonging. At least, many of the homes of the previous generations were actually owned by the occupants. Today, many women express this common sentiment: I would rather have a run down old house and own it outright than have all these modern things and have to pay so much interest and never get out of debt.

    I learned that these neighborhoods were deliberately designed to shut out your neighbors. Without front porches, we no longer sat on the them and observed the comings and goings and the behavior our our own and the neighbor’s children. We were unable to see when a crime was committed. We could not observe anything that was going on. With the windows facing our neighbor’s house, we could not look out without our neighbor thinking we were peering into his house, so we shut the drapes and retreated to the privacy of the back yard.

    If one attempts to go for a walk in their neighborhood, they must pass within very close proximity of their neighbor’s front windows, and feel self-conscious that they are intruding on private property. Even the barrier of a side walk does not remove that feeling. The whole design makes us all more suspicious of our neighbor rather than loving of our neighbor.

    There is much more behind the scenes scheming in the development of modern architecture. Whereas most architects of the past felt responsible to lift up mankind to acknowledge the presence of God, and to ennoble his soul through beauty and design that glorified God, the moderns of the 20th century stripped architecture of any embellishment or beauty, reasoning that it was “primitive, ” or ” conceited,” and lacking in “meaning.” They substituted it with their own “interpretation,” which involved the belief that man had evolved and was more closely related to animals. He only needed a stall to live in and a place to eat. He could live without ornaments of beauty or gardens or flowers or windows to look out of.

    Many women in modern homes with all the amenities and conveniences and appliances they could wish for, have expressed the most fantastic sentiments, that would make the designers of these neighborhoods cringe. For example,

    “I would rather live in a tent and own it outright, and have a great deal more nature to look at.”

    “I could actually do more with an older, broken down home, to make it livable and beautiful, than in this new house.”

    “I’d rather live in the house I grew up in…it seemed so much more like a real home.”

    “I have trouble adjusting to this house. Why should we “adjust” to a house? Shouldn’t houses be things we are drawn to and enjoy, without having to agonize over all the problems they have?”

    “Drapery is too expensive in these modern homes. That is why I use a blanket over the window.”

    I can relate to all these problems. The older homes did not seem to have so many things to adjust to. Alexander Jackson Davis, said, “A house should have nooks and crannies about, where one would love to linger…” In a modern home I was always wanting to take out walls and make more space, but in older homes, I loved the little spaces that existed. They seemed to be designed with a purpose and the contentment we felt in those kinds of houses was much more than in a modern structure.

    One French architect that my s.i.l. had to study, claimed that all we needed was houses designed as cars. Another architect of dubious character and a questionable home life, claimed all you had to do was ask a brick what it wanted to be. “I said to the brick, ‘brick, what do you want to be? It answered me, ‘I want to be an arch.’ ” Today this man’s structures sit in modern decay, begging for money to resurrect them. One of these architects created a structure with airplane wings for the roof. The professor proudly told my son-in-law that this designer wanted to make the world a better place, and this piece was an expression of that. My son in law, older now, and more wise to the ways of modernists, said, “Just a minute. Please explain to us how that structure makes the world a better place.” The teacher fell over his own words trying to get out of explaining it because the challenge startled him and he was not prepared to explain it.
    To emphasize how a home can either be conducive to family life and family love, or be erosive, I found this quote by famed 20th century architect, Frank Lloyd Wright:

    “A doctor can bury his mistakes but an architect can only advise his clients to plant vines. “

    He also knew that architecture had a strong effect on the human mind, for he said that he could design a house that could cause a divorce in a matter of weeks.

    I believe we should hold designers and architects responsible for what they do. In a free market system, every architect and designer should have to go back to the houses they created and ask the dwellers how they are getting along. It would be interesting to see if there are more family quarrels, more stress, less efficiency, less relaxation, or more family cohesiveness in the homes they live in. If the family expressed dissatisfaction, the designers would get a bad grade. Architecture schools would thrive only based on the reputation of the students they produced with their curriculums–whether or not that person’s work was good and lasting, and whether o not the homes were desirable. Surveys would have to be produced that included how much crime was committed in those neighborhoods, divorce, family quarrels, and general discontent. That is not to say that human problems are the the entire fault of architecture, but just to show how bad architecture does contribute to some problems.

    I was unable to find paintings of modern homes to include here, as artists do not seem to be inclined to paint sentimental pictures of them, for some reason. Thomas Kinkade’s paintings are now being adapted into actual building blueprints for homes.

    For more about Andrew Jackson Downing, check here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Jackson_Downing

    http://www.fredericklawolmsted.com/ajdowning.htm

    (A design by A.J. Downing in the 1800’s)

    “Every house must have something in its aspect which the heart an fasten upon and become attached to…” A.J. Downing

    Online book of Alexander Jackson Davis house plans http://books.google.com/books?id=KuWL9UnyEWQC&dq=alexander+jackson+davis&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=iYnm5gk9wO&sig=JocedDS0ePT6QV6oeCABoZignFU
    Addition (Oct. 1, 2007): My son in law has asked me to ask readers to post their observations of the effect of architecture on their moods and their daily life for some research he is doing while in architecture school. Things like traffic flow, interference, inconvenience, lack of beauty, isolation, uneasiness, etc….please post your thoughts and I’ll send it all to him. Its okay to post anonymously but it also is okay to send pictures to describe the problems.

    Also, I want to emphasis a point that one woman brought up in the comments. I commented on it but want to add it here: With any radical change that “they” (those who foist it upon us) want to present, comes the knowledge of just how much we will tolerate. Like bad legislation, they will often tack on an advantage that we just can’t live without or that adds to our comfort, whether it be refrigeration or nice formica in the kitchen, to distract us from the other problems that we would object to. Then we end up living in houses that have terrible architecture–architecture that somehow makes us feel nervous or discontent, but we think, “I should be grateful, because I at least have running water and I’m not living in a tent.”

    Well with some of these designs, I could have been happier in a tent or a motor home.The house made you want to scream.

    I’ve talked to other women about this and they said the same thing, “I thought it was just me. I thought I was being ungrateful.” It isn’t just you. There were efforts after major wars to change housing so that people would feel like animals. Modernists were educated to believe in evolution, and evolution plays a part in modern architecture.

    Christians, especially, will be so polite and so tolerant because they don’t want to seem ungrateful, that these elitist designers will change our cities, add things to our water, and create all kinds of problems for us, knowing it will take years for anyone to notice to the point of objecting. Architecture is the same way.

    They create terrible looking buildings even in the country: barns that look like ammunition storage sheds, etc. taking away the beauty and sentimentality of the farms and creating horrid scenery for us to look at across the field. It is revolting. It took a hundred years to made the old Victorian houses break down and turn into haunted houses, but it only takes a few days to make you feel like screeching in shock at some of the newer places you have to live in, due to the bad architecture.

    One major differences in the houses of the 19th century and the Victorian era is this: the houses were almost always built for someone, and rarely were two exactly alike, whereas the homes of the last couple of decades were built for sale. That makes a big difference in their comfort and design. It makes a big difference in their dignity. It makes a big difference in the family relationship.

     Below: a design by Alexander Jackson Davis, early American architect.  These houses were designed to delight a family and glorify God.

     

  • If You Want to Work at Home, Be Creative!

    If You Want to Work at Home, Be Creative!

    Do you want to work at home, but you’re not sure what to do? Here are some ideas about things that let you earn an income while staying at home. (more…)

  • When Saving Money, Make It Work For You

    When Saving Money, Make It Work For You

    When Saving Money, Make It Work For You

    Christy M. writes: The next time (if there is one) that you can stand to do an article on cleaning, kid chores or when to spend a bit more – here are my comments, take them or leave them :)

    My son has disabilities that include attention span and fine motor skills. We decided it was far more important to make sure he learned some skills around the house as well as feeling like a useful member of the family, than to worry about saving a few dollars. I buy the wipes in a container and use regular wet Swiffer cloths and the Clorox Ready Mop. Those are items he can manipulate himself for cleaning the bathroom and mopping the hardwood floors, and I don’t have to worry about toxic chemicals or bleach getting sloshed around. Also, we are on a septic system, and using the disposables limits the harsh liquids going into the septic tank, extending the period between pumpings. Yes, of course I realize that they ARE going into the garbage.

    Again, this is what WORKS FOR US. I generally stock up on these cleaners at the warehouse store when they are running a coupon special. I tried using the wet Swiffer type wipes from the dollar store but didn’t care for the performance. Generally we wet Swiffer a couple of times a week and then my daughter or I do a "good old" sponge mop job with Spic n Span or similar, about once a week. If the floors are very grubby in between, we’ll touch up with the Ready Mop. Our bathrooms are small, so half a dozen wipes and one wet Swiffer cloth for the bathrooms does it for the week.

    Just another example of how thriftiness doesn’t have to be "all or nothing."

    Christy

     

    Tawra: Hi Christy, Thank you for this great reminder that the goal is not always to save the most money, but rather to make the best decision for your family. For all of us, there will be times when it is worth spending a little more to make it work for you and your family.

     

    photo by: aflcio2008