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The Art of Painfully Mastering House and Home [A Beginner's and DIY Guide]
Tips and tricks for the rest of us~ Post anything helpful! Don't forget to link or quote if it is not yours. |
How to properly press clothes~ Quote:
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Homemade soaps! Quote:
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Ohhhh me like!!
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I'm going to try this~ Quote:
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This is… excellent. [ninja]
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I'm somewhat frugal, so I like to make stuff from scratch. The laundry soap is a real winner. I use vinegar as a fabric softener, then line dry. Super soft clothes that smell great. :D |
Pfft, I see how it is!
My friends! Oh, and jelly I guess. [roll] [cry] |
jelly is special
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Jelly isn't just a friend!
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Nice tries, guys. [lol]
I love the idea of making my own products, but I've yet to ever do it. OH! I did use bicarb to clean my oven, that worked beautifully, without the hideous fumes you get from canned over cleaner. I sprinkled it all over the bottom of the oven until it was completely covered, them misted it with hot water and left it. Cleaned it off the next day I think. I used some plastic scappy thing then wiped up any that was left. I did use bicarbonate of soda for this, I'm sure you could also use washing soda. The bicarb I bought was a 1kg tub. It's a good idea to get a big tub if you can, as it tends to work out miles cheaper per kilo, and it has so many uses around the house. |
you ARE special, jelly. [angel] and you don't have to even try!
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Jelly, you are not on my friends list. Would you like to be? Then, when I use the malicious My Friends ping, you shall be summoned! >D I will write reviews about these soon~ I'm using the starch and the laundry soap. I made the dish soap, but I'm waiting for it to meld. |
Oh god, not the malicious friend ping! [gonk]
[lol] |
Pour vinegar in the fabric softener section of your washer as a substitute. Cheaper, helps clean (weak antibacterial properties - it's no bleach, but it's better than nothing) and, no, that smell doesn't remain once it's dried - it can actually help remove some odors. Might still need to throw in a dryer sheet once it's drying time (really, only to cut down on static - your clothes won't be stiff or course. Sheets aren't necessary in humider months), but it saves a lot of money. Plus, a lot less gross oily residue on your laundry. You don't realize how greasy your washrags are until you've gotten used to washing your face with softener-less ones and then try to go back. [lol]
Also, animal fat is used in a lot of fabric softeners, and they don't have to tell you which ones. You may not be veggie/vegan, but that's still creepy, right? Animal fat all over your laundry? Ech. [gonk] |
So you're telling me I wash my shirt to get out the steak stain... only to wash it in more steak? Wait- I knew this about a few hand soaps I think. Not sure if they were processed, or if some organic soaps do it, too.
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IT'S IN HANDSOAPS TOO?! [gonk]
No! I wash my hands! |
Apparently it's why some of them feel so greasy, yet pull chicken and bacon fat off your hands so well.
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Everyone knows the very best soap is made from human fat!
Fight club, anyone? I still believe it's what all the fat syphoned off fat American butts should be used for. Never would there have been a more sustainable resource...and no issue for vegans etc. surely? As no-one would have been killed to harvest it. |
During the Holocaust, the fat from some concentration camp victims was used for soap...
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Yeah : /
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And suddenly everything was sad... and painfully ironic. That is a religion that will never catch a break.
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I use vinegar as a fabric softener. I added a lemon essential oil to it, because I hate the smell of vinegar. I literally gag. |
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