Showing posts with label home blessing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label home blessing. Show all posts

Friday, April 26, 2024

The Basics of Homemade Cleaning Supplies

(Reprint of blog post dated Tuesday, March 8, 2011 with a few corrections or comments made along the way.)


I've made my own homemade cleaning supplies for many years and have never regretted it. Occasionally, I have slipped back into the convenience of purchasing ready-made laundry detergent, but am never as satisfied with it as I am with my own homemade. Even though I have shared some of these recipes before, I thought I'd share my basic cleaning supply list of homemade formulas with you today...


ALL-PURPOSE CLEANER
 Mix in a sprayer bottle:

1 T. ammonia
1 T. liquid laundry detergent
2 cups of water

This recipe costs virtually nothing to make and, in my opinion, works as well as, or better than, the 409 All-Purpose Cleaner that I used for years at almost $2.50 a bottle! 

(I'm sure that 409 All-Purpose Cleaner costs way more than $2.50 a bottle now!!!) 

HOMEMADE GLASS CLEANER

Mix in a sprayer bottle:

1 cup rubbing alcohol
1 cup water
1 tablespoon white vinegar
1 tablespoon ammonia

This is the best glass cleaner I've ever used and it's streak-free!

HOMEMADE CARPET FRESHENER

1/2 cup of borax
1/2 cup of baking soda
1 teaspoon of cloves and/or cinnamon (cloves help keep moths out of the closet too)

Or, if you've got pets, instead of the spices, use about 20-25 drops of sweet orange oil (I use the spices AND the orange oil), which is a natural flea repellent; be sure to mix in the oil into powder mixture thoroughly and never use directly onto your pets.

HOMEMADE LAUNDRY SOAP - LIQUID

1/3 bar Fels Naptha soap
½ cup Arm and Hammer Super Washing Soda
½ cup 20 Mule-Team Borax powder  
 
You will also need a small bucket, about 2 gallon size.

Grate the soap and put it in a sauce pan.  Add 6 cups water and heat it until the soap melts.  Add the washing soda and the borax and stir until it is dissolved.  Remove from heat.  Pour 4 cups hot water into the bucket.   Now add your soap mixture and stir.  Now add 1 gallon plus 6 cups of water and stir.  Let the soap sit for about 24 hours and it will gel.  You use ½ cup per load. 

(Note: The finished soap will not be a solid gel; it will be more of a watery gel. And the soap is a low sudsing soap. You won't see suds, but that's okay. Suds are not what cleans; it's the ingredients in the soap.) 

HOMEMADE LAUNDRY SOAP - POWDERED

2 cups finely grated Fels Naptha soap
1 cup 20 Mule-Team Borax
1 cup Arm and Hammer Super Washing Soda

Mix and store in a coffee can or what have you. Use 1 to 2 tablespoons per load.


HOMEMADE FABRIC SOFTENER

6 cups water
3 cups white vinegar
2 cups hair conditioner (the best I've found so far is Suave Ocean Breeze...Mmmmmm!) 

(I don't know if they even make Suave shampoo anymore...haven't even looked for it in years...but am re-thinking products like this anyway due to their liberal use of sodium lauryl sulfate. More on that at another time, but you might research it and check your ingredient lables.)

Use as you would any softener (I use mine in a Downy ball). It won't leave a residue on your clothing or towels. 

Well, these are just a few of the homemade products that we use in our home. I find their cleaning ability equal, or superior, to what you would typically purchase at the local retail stores, and only the Lord knows for sure how much money we've saved over the years since switching to these products.

Happy Cleaning!

~Rebecca

Recent and related posts that you might enjoy reading...

The Basics Of Homemade Cleaning Supplies (original post)

Wednesday, March 6, 2024

Tackling The Bathroom

I straighten daily and do a general cleaning weekly, but it's been a long time since I really tackled the bathroom like I did today.



Before starting I took down the shower curtain and curtain-liner and gathered them together with towels, washrags, and rugs to be laundered.

Next, I made a thick paste out of baking soda and water and coated the shower walls and tub with it and let it set for a while before wiping and rinsing. 



(I had forgotten what a joy it is to clean with baking soda and what a great job it does of whitening and cleaning without bleach and other harsh chemicals.) 



While I was working with the tub, I unscrewed the drain strainer, and using one of those drain cleaner tools, removed several big globs of hair that was trapped there. Yuck!!! 😝



I cleaned the sink with a baking soda paste and cleaned the toilet bowl with Clorox Clinging Bleach Gel.



I finished up by spritzing the sink and toilet with Mrs. Meyers Peppermint Scented Multisurface Cleaner and wiping them down with paper towels.


That's what I used today in cleaning my bathroom. What are some of the products that you use when cleaning yours?

Until next time...
~Rebecca

Recent and related posts that you might enjoy reading...








Thursday, April 18, 2019

Giving The Bedroom A Spring Lift

In winter I love the cozy, rustic look of our black bear ensemble, but, with the arrival of spring, I felt that it was time for something new...something cool and more suitable for summer. 


1950's Reproduction Chenille Bedspread
When I saw this I knew it was the perfect thing! 💗

This 1930's Waterfall bedroom set belonged to my great aunt, Tootsie. When she passed away my mother inherited the set and, when both of my parents were gone, of course, it came to me. 

As a child, I always remember seeing this set of furniture in Tootsie's bedroom. The bed always had some pretty chenille bedspread on it and a set of collie dogs like this one.


Photo Credit
After my mother inherited the set, she always talked of getting a pretty chenille bedspread for the bed, but never did. When I saw this one, offered through Vermont Country Store, I decided to go for it! 


1950's Reproduction Chenille Bedspread
I love spring flowers and wanted something pretty and pink to tie in with the sage green walls. My mother always wanted a chenille bedspread and Tootsie always had one (or more) during my growing up years. This bedspread just seemed to fit all the way around, so, I ordered it! 


1950's Reproduction Chenille Bedspread
To round it out, I purchased a set of white sheets and a pair of rose-printed pillow shams for our top set of pillows. 


Photo Credit


Photo Credit

(And since this was only the second or third set of bedding that we've purchased in 30+ years of marriage and since it wasn't going on a credit card, I didn't feel too bad about it, either!). 😆

How about you? What spring lifts are you giving the rooms in your home? 🌷

Until next time...
~Rebecca

Recent and related posts that you might enjoy reading...


The Days of Lilac, Redbud, Dogwood, and Violets






Wednesday, July 5, 2017

My Weekly "Home Blessing"

I have written about my weekly "home blessing" before, but my home blessing today looks much different than it used to.

I first got the idea of the weekly home blessing many years ago from Flylady. I started with her list and, over time, developed my own list that fits my own situation. What used to work then, though, doesn't work now because we moved and things have changed.

We have lived in, what used to be my dad's house, since October of 2016. It has taken time, but, over the months that we've lived here a new cleaning routine has taken shape and a revised "home blessing" occurs on a weekly basis...generally on Mondays. 

(At least that is the target date each week. Sometimes something comes up and the home blessing doesn't take place until Tuesday or Wednesday, but I don't think that a week has gone by since getting established here that it has been skipped altogether.) 

The weekly home blessing is not a substitute for, or meant to be, a deep-clean by any means. It is designed to cover surface cleaning that can be done quickly, yet makes a world a difference in the look and feel of your home.

(Monday is my main wash day, too, so I add laundry tasks to my home blessing list, but that's because it works well for me and my schedule. Not everyone would probably want to pile that much stuff into one day, but I sort of have to make everything work on my end.)

So, what does the weekly "home blessing" look like? For me, it looks like this:

Each Monday morning I make a list of all my cleaning tasks. As I complete each task in a specific room, I cross it off the list. When all the tasks in that room are done, I cross that room off the list and move on to the next. 

(And none of these tasks take very long. In fact, some of them take less than a minute to complete; laundry, of course, takes the longest.)

My basic "home blessing" task list looks like this:


Bedroom 

- straighten
- wipe mirrors 
- dust and oil furniture
- vacuum 

Hallway

- straighten
- dust
- sweep 
- mop

Bathroom

- straighten
- wipe mirrors
- dust
- swish tub, sink, and toilet
- clean toilet bowl
- empty trash
- wash rugs
- wash dirty towels and washrags
- wash shower curtain (first Monday of each month)
- sweep
- mop

Van Gogh Room (Office)

- straighten
- dust
- vacuum

Livingroom

- straighten
- dust
- clean glass shelves
- wipe window panes in front door (first Monday of each month)
- vacuum


Kitchen and Back Porch 

- straighten
- wipe down dish-drainer
- do dishes
- wipe stove and counter tops
- straighten fridge
- clean microwave
- take out trash
- sweep
- mop
- sweep back porch
- wipe down washer and dryer

Laundry

- bedding (first Monday of the month)
- darks
- towels and washrags
- bathroom rugs
- shower curtain (first Monday of the month)
- whites

Well, that's what my weekly "home blessing" looks like. Do you do a weekly home blessing in your home? If so, what does your list look like?

Until next time...
~Rebecca