Creative Cleaning with Everyday Products Print
Tuesday, 10th November 2009 (by Baker)This article is about Frugality, Hints and Tips
This article is by GRS staff writer Adam Baker. Baker recently shared an in-depth video example of how you can save $521 when booking airfare online.
Recently my 19-month old daughter managed to get her tiny hands on a ballpoint pen. Normally, this wouldn’t have been a major event. This time was different. In the 30-45 seconds it took for me to notice, she’d thoroughly covered two-and-half cushions of our microsuede couch with a beautiful masterpiece in ink slashes and squiggles.
While I’m proud of the her dedication to detail and new art skills, this wasn’t exactly the platform I wanted to her display them on. I confiscated the pen and walked straight to the computer; I knew that time is of the essence with ink.
I found a wide variety of solutions on the internet. Two simple ones were most common: rubbing alcohol and/or Windex. Really? I knew water would only make matters worse, so my first though wasn’t to use rubbing alcohol.
I took a short walk to the corner store for a bottle of rubbing alcohol and a large pack of Q-Tips. Two l-o-n-g hours later, the ink was mostly gone. After the damp spots dried, the damage was all but invisible. Success!
As a fan of simplicity, I loved this easy, straight-forward solution to my problem. Afterward, I spent more time than I’d like to admit scouring the web for similar creative cleaning hacks that involve everyday products. There are more than you can imagine, but several in particular caught my eye.
The many uses for cola
It’s actually scary what cola can be used to accomplish. While there are many sites dedicated to amazing uses for this common soft drink, two cleaning solutions appear on almost every list:
- Polish tarnished chrome. Apparently the only other material you need is a piece of crumbled aluminum foil. Pour the coke on the chrome, scrub lightly with the foil, rinse with water, and repeat. This can be used on everything from old motorcycles to bathroom sinks.
- Clean stains out of toilet bowls. Supposedly the acid in coke works well to break down stains in a toilet bowl. While this is commonly listed as a legit cleaning solution, a 2003 episode of MythBusters concluded that this was “busted” — it doesn’t really work.
However, the Myth Busters episode did confirm some other uses for cola:
- Shine and clean pennies,
- Help clean a battery terminal, and
- Even remove blood stains.
I’ve never been a huge fan of cola, and you can be sure just makes it more likely that I won’t be reaching for a can of Coke anytime soon.
Removing oil stains
Oil stains are some of the toughest to remove once they set in. When a spill occurs and you don’t have specially-designed cleaner on hand, you have two other options:
- Kitty litter
- Powdered dish-washing detergent
With either product, you should sprinkle the granules and let them sit for fifteen minutes or so. Next, soak with hot soapy water and scrub with a push broom. (Or you can use a pressure washer, if you have one.)
I also found an interesting suggestion for using dryer lint to soak up oil on Lifehacker. The article doesn’t go into much detail, but this is a better option than paper towels or traditional towels, which tend to smear the stain rather than absorb it.
NOT-so-permanent markers
As with the oil stains, it’s exponentially easier to remove permanent marker if you get to the scribbles before they have a chance to set into the paint. In this case, many straight-forward cleaning solutions work very well.
Depending on the surface of the wall and type of paint, some options cause more fading than others. When in doubt, test the following options in a closet first so you can gauge gauge any negative reaction to the paint:
- Basic rubbing alcohol,
- Bathroom hand sanitizer, and
- Toothpaste (works better with baking soda as ingredient)
In all three instances, many people claim that scrubbing with a tooth brush gives good results!
Removing ink stains
In my own story above, we needed to remove ink from a microsuede couch. We had several options to choose from. In each case, though, experts suggested try the chemicals in small inconspicuous spots first since microsuede fabric has many different forms. Options included:
- Rubbing alcohol,
- Windex, and even
- Nail polish remover
In our case, the rubbing alcohol did an effective job when applied to small, targeted quantities.
But let’s face it: You’re more likely to get an ink stain on your clothes, not your microsuede sofa. When this happens, the most important rule is not to use hot water or apply strong pressure right away. Both hot water and intense pressure actually cause the ink to set in deeper, making it more difficult to remove. Instead, try applying:
- Hairspray,
- Foaming shaving cream, or
- Nail polish remover
After applying the chemical directly onto the stain, blot gently, switching the cleaning fabric frequently to maximize the amount absorbed. Once you’ve absorbed as much as possible, you can rinse the fabric thoroughly and attempt to wash it regularly in hot water.
Note: As a rule of thumb, you should test any alternative cleaning solution on a small sample before attacking the actual stain. And in nearly every case, you’ll have greater chance of success the quicker you’re able to start cleaning.
What other creative cleaning hacks have you found for around the house? Which of your homemade remedies have been most effective — and which have failed miserably?
Photo by geishaboy500.

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November 10th, 2009 at 5:48 am
“I’ve never been a huge fan of cola, and you can be sure just makes it more likely that I won’t be reaching for a can of Coke anytime soon.”
Ever see what lemon juice can do as a cleaner? Should we conclude then that you’ll never consume lemon juice either?
November 10th, 2009 at 6:07 am
Anybody got a gentle way to remove rust? I have an old metal map of the world with rust on the surface, I would like to remove it without defacing the map worse than it already is.
November 10th, 2009 at 6:22 am
I’ll have to try that powder detergent on oil..I got some marks on my driveway…Thanks
November 10th, 2009 at 6:33 am
@Lindsay - lemon juice, vinegar… really anything acidic. I would consider throwing in some table salt for an abrasive. Once removed, rinse well to get the acidity off.
November 10th, 2009 at 6:37 am
My favorite is soaking blood stains in hydrogen peroxide. Sometimes it takes a few soaks with fresh peroxide, but it really bubbles the blood away. (ewwwh…)
November 10th, 2009 at 6:45 am
I washed a black pen in a pair of khaki shorts one time and my mom soaked them in milk overnight. This removed any signs that they were formerly covered in black ink.
November 10th, 2009 at 6:50 am
Hydrogen peroxide can be used to remove blood from cloth. It won’t completely remove it if the blood has set, but if you apply the peroxide and then wash the item it will typically remove the blood.
A bit unpleasant I know, but better to know this trick than loose a nice shirt to a cut or a nose bleed.
November 10th, 2009 at 6:52 am
Nail polish remover is great for ball point pen, but only up to a point. When an entire penful has leaked onto a synthetic dress shirt, then yes, you can remove it, but you will also remove significant quantities of shirt material, as I discovered in college. My (male, hopeless) friend was still grateful, as he needed the shirt that night, but it was somewhat thin in place, to the point of being almost transparent.
He bought a new shirt, and never left his washing in the laundry unattended again.
A bit “icky”, but saliva is one of the best ways to get rid of blood stains (obviously best if it’s small and your own blood!). Otherwise use cold water, as hot water will set it. I generally find that I don’t need to use anything more than cold water and soap for bloodstains (I’m a first aider, not an axe-murderer OK!).
November 10th, 2009 at 7:00 am
these pointers are really useful for a do it yourselfer. Sadly i think i would have called the cavalry to clean the mess up :). I am not much in the way of cleaning messes
November 10th, 2009 at 7:06 am
Boiling water will remove cherry stains.
White vinegar is great for removing odors from clothing, just soak and then wash.
To get urine out of a carpet, blot as much as possible. Sprinkle liberally with baking soda. Wait 20 minutes or so. Vacuum it up, then pour club soda over the area. It will fizz nicely, and then you can soak up the club soda with a clean towel.
Hairspray removes sharpie marker from slick surfaces.
Rubbing alcohol will take dried latex paint off a hard surface, like woodwork or a door handle.
Toothpaste will remove silver tarnish.
November 10th, 2009 at 7:15 am
@Ben
Thanks!
November 10th, 2009 at 7:16 am
I use Microfiber cloths from the auto care aisle for cleaning windows. I use nothing but water and the cloth.
I had literally given up on cleaning my windows but noticed how clean my neighbors were and asked for her secret. I am now proud of how clean mine look.
For most clothing stains I use a fells naptha bar. It’s a brand of soap that’s been around almost unchanged since the late 1800’s. I wet the stain , rub the bar on it and wash as usual. It takes out most stains and lasts a very long time.
We also always have ‘goof off’ around. It removes a lot of things like paint, sticker residue stuck to floors or walls.
November 10th, 2009 at 7:23 am
Actually you should test any cleaner (alternative or not) before you use it for the first time. Even something that you bought in a big fancy bottle that says for couches — removes ink! (for example) could still ruin your fabric or cause discoloration. For me using “alterntive” cleaners has been good because I am more careful about doing the test spot — which is kind of silly since I once ruined a carpet with carpet cleaner, i really should know better.
November 10th, 2009 at 7:31 am
Citric acid will do the same thing as Coke, but without the stickiness. And it’s less expensive! You can buy it in bulk at a winemaking supply shop.
Just because there is a natural ingredient in Coke that is good for cleaning certain things, that doesn’t mean it’s doing something destructive to your internal organs or anything, as many people conclude.
A slice of lemon dipped in salt is great for cleaning the copper bottoms of cookware, but that doesn’t mean I’ll give up lemons or salt anytime soon.
November 10th, 2009 at 8:07 am
Baby wipes work wonders on ink as well. And I typically have them around when my baby goes artistic on me.
Oxyclean for blood.
November 10th, 2009 at 8:17 am
Yes, oxyclean or peroxide will work on blood stains. If it can be soaked in a bucket, I prefer to use a mixture of cool water and Tide detergent. Maybe a capful in 5 gallons. Usually 24 hrs does it- I think the detergent has enzymes in it that help to break down the blood. If it is an old blood stain or set in, change solution and soak longer. Eventually it comes out. I only use oxyclean or peroxide on the real old stains.
November 10th, 2009 at 8:24 am
We are big fans of cleaning with plain white vinegar. Does a better job on windows than any fancy cleaner I’ve purchased. Takes mild crayon stains off plastic storage tubs too. Does wonders for my ceramic tile floor too.
November 10th, 2009 at 8:27 am
I was at a restaurant one time and my car wouldn’t start. I popped the hood and my battery was corroded heavily at the connections. A mechanic looking guy was also in the parking lot. He told me to go inside an get a little Coke and poor it on the connections - it would clean it enough to get the car started. I poured a dab of Coke and it just ate away the corrosion. Now I know what to do with a corroded battery - however I’ve lost a once favorite drink. After seeing what Coke does to battery corrosion I can only guess what it does to my stomach lining - so I went cold turkey.
November 10th, 2009 at 8:37 am
I once managed to splatter one of my favorite shirts with paint. I did some online research, and alcohol worked wonders.
Also, peroxide on blood works best.
Another thing - I save my dryer sheets. They are great for removing soap scum in the shower. Just wet them and rub away!
Oh, and if you don’t want to use Coke in your toilet, you can also use denture cleaning tablets or Alka-seltzer. It’s the same principal.
November 10th, 2009 at 8:40 am
I’ve heard that wet newspaper is good for cleaning windows, although I haven’t tested that one myself. A woman I work with also cleans her mirrors with vodka (although, while that’s certainly an interesting solution, and more environmentally friendly that chemicals, it’s not all that frugal!). I appreciate the other tips in this article & the comments.
November 10th, 2009 at 8:50 am
By the way, Baking Soda is a GREAT way to remove stains. I remember once in high school, my friend Jenna and I spilled nail polish on what was probably a very expensive rug. Baking soda, a toothbrush, and a few scrubs, and the stain was gone!
http://missmoneypenny.squarespace.com
November 10th, 2009 at 9:02 am
Alright, I guess, but what’s the point? Why not just use regular cleaners?
You can tell me rubbing alcohol is cheaper at $0.99 than fabric cleaner at $2.99 I guess, but considering I might go through one bottle per year of either, it hardly makes a difference financially.
Might as well post 101 ways to opener a beer without a bottle opener. I can do it with a butter knife or the edge of a counter. I’ve seen people do it with their teeth, which is sort of a cool party trick.
November 10th, 2009 at 9:08 am
@Tyler: the sort of stains that are being discussed are often NOT removable by the standard products. Ink is a great example, I had tried all the commecial products I had on hand before someone told me about the hairspray trick. Which, by the way, worked even though the item had been washed and dried many times in previous attempts to remove the stain. Sometimes, it’s about creative ways to save something otherwise unsalvageable.
November 10th, 2009 at 9:16 am
If you have a woodstove/fireplace with glass doors the very best cleaner is damp newspaper. Dip the damp paper in ash (not too much) and scrub. All of the black soot comes right off.
November 10th, 2009 at 9:32 am
Lindsay, My dh used to work in salt water and needed to ware a name tag which would leave rust stains on his white shirt. We would rub a little “whitening toothpast on them before washing and the rust came right out…it might be worth a try on your maps.
November 10th, 2009 at 9:33 am
Hey Adam,
Finding multiple uses for everyday items around you is a win-win situation: you save money and increase simplicity.
You don’t have to constantly buy single-function items for just-in-case scenarios (”you never know when the cat will take a poop on this vinyl-covered stool… so that’s why we need Poop-A-Way Vinyl-Edition”), so you save tons of money. And because you have less items around the house, you increase simplicity.
You don’t need to think about just-in-case scenarios. Rather, when a situation does arise, you simply figure out how to effectively solve the problem with items you already have and use for other things.
It might take more work up front to research multiple uses for items, but like building an automated personal finance system or a setting up a business, it’s a one-time thing that’ll more than pay off in savings and simplicity from that point on.
Thanks for the tips and the awesome reminder to maximize use of the minimum items,
Oleg
November 10th, 2009 at 9:35 am
My boyfriend some how got ink on his shirt, which made it through the dryer. We thought the $80 shirt was ruined forever. However, after doing some research and trial and error I found that good old baking soda and mineral water helped fade the stain so much that he can wear his favorite shirt again!
I was suprised it worked so well on something that has been through the dryer, everything I read made me feel like we were doomed once it went through all that heat.
November 10th, 2009 at 9:43 am
Cuticle cream for permanent marker on leather — works like a dream and doesn’t hurt the leather.
November 10th, 2009 at 10:01 am
These may or may not work but if you are going to go out of your way and clean, might as well use cleaning products and techniques that work. I don’t think you save by using other products, you still have to pay for them.
November 10th, 2009 at 10:04 am
Hairspray was always are choice for getting ink out of our clothes in high school. Glad you found a way to get it out of the couch! Ink pen… ouch.
November 10th, 2009 at 10:13 am
@Tyler,
Another reason this is useful is because there is sometimes a time constraint with a stain. In Adam’s example, he only had a short time period before the stain set in his couch, so he had to use what was on hand. Sure, if you had a cleaner available that would work, it would make sense to use that, but sometimes you don’t, and everyday items that we all have in our house can also work in a pinch. And if you want to be greener, it makes sense to use baking soda rather than a commercial cleaner, even if you don’t care about the cost difference.
November 10th, 2009 at 10:37 am
Anyone know how to get candle wax off carpet after it has dried. Happend on Halloween when moving the pumkin with candle in it and not aware that it tipped over and spilt until after it dried.
November 10th, 2009 at 11:01 am
For getting juice and wine stains out of clothes - especially with any sort of dark red/purple juice and red wine - the best solution I’ve ever found is to pour boiling water through the article of clothing directly over the stain.
I found this trick on a really old “how to remove stains” guide that my mother saved from the mid-sixties. While most advice says to stay away from hot water, using *boiling* water on the red juice or wine spots melts the stain out like magic.
The trick is to get the water as hot as possible (I use our electric kettle) and then to pour it onto the fabric so that the water can ideally flow through the cloth. Wear rubber gloves, because it’s pretty easy to splash water or steam onto your hands when doing this.
I’ve removed all sorts of juice stains (even old stains) and once got an entire glass of red wine out of my father-in-law’s pristine white dress shirt - there was no trace of wine left after I poured several kettles of boiling water through it, and the fabric was not damaged in the least.
November 10th, 2009 at 11:03 am
I recently used Dawn dishwashing detergent on a shirt that had a set in grease stain (it had been washed and dried several times already.) I just rubbed a little Dawn in the stain and washed with the next load. The stain came out and I moved the shirt from the “yard work” drawer to the “ok to wear in public” drawer.
November 10th, 2009 at 11:07 am
Lisa, for candle wax I remember my mom would cover the wax with a brown paper shopping bag and use an iron on it. The paper would absorb most of the melted wax. Can anyone else back me up on this?
November 10th, 2009 at 11:07 am
As a certified wino (ahem, oenophile) my favorite tip is to use white wine to remove red wine stains.
But you have to apply it right away, not usually a problem since most people are aware when red wine spills
November 10th, 2009 at 11:19 am
@Lisa - I’ve done the exact same thing that Phil did, only with a paper towel and an iron instead of a shopping bag. It works really well. You might have to do it multiple times it it’s a lot of wax.
November 10th, 2009 at 11:25 am
Lisa: use ice in a double plastic bag to harden the wax. It will become brittle and you can break off the bigger bits. This is also the best way to get wax off hard surfaces (e.g. wood, which you would not want to iron!).
Then, once you’ve removed the worst of it, use the paper and iron trick that Phil suggested. Start with the lowest possible heat so that you don’t melt the carpet unless you know its composition… Also, keep moving the area of paper, so that the wax doesn’t stick to the iron or go onto another bit of carpet.
It does work (as someone who regularly cares for a college chapel where the students spill wax on EVERYTHING!)
November 10th, 2009 at 11:27 am
My daughter disassembled an ink pen in our new-to-us minivan. I used rubbing alcohol, too. Hairspray is largely alcohol-based, but it’s more likely to have on hand. When possible, use the original form, without the scents of hairspray.
Beware of peroxide on clothing, too much can put holes in the fabric. But it takes several applications.
November 10th, 2009 at 11:31 am
Rubbing alcohol with take most marks off of white walls too. Just don;t use too much or you’ll take the paint too!
November 10th, 2009 at 11:38 am
Wow–you’ve got kids, you’ve got stains!
We’ve found the best thing to do in most stain situations is to soak them a.s.a.p. Not wipe them up, but to apply water or club soda so that the substance can’t dry and also to let the water or club soda break up the stain before it becomes entrenched. At a minimum this buys time to come up with the long term solution. Club soda seems to work better, perhaps because of the bubbles.
A handy man in our area also offered up this advice to those with kids. Instead of painting the interior of your house with enamel paints (presumably because they’re less prone to stain and easier to clean) use flat paints instead, and keep a supply of paint handy. He said that kids can cause stains in the most unlikely situations and enamel paint is no protection to what they can dish out.
Some stains and discolorations will become such that repainting the spot is the only real option, and flat paints handle this much better. Fresh flat paint blends with the color of the existing paint in a matter of days, where the enamels will always look like they’ve been patched because old and new paint enamels don’t blend as well.
His advice is based on the idea that theories about kids and how to handle them don’t hold up in the real world. We used his advice and it paid off.
November 10th, 2009 at 11:38 am
@ Lisa #32, I concur with Phil - brown paper and an iron works to remove candle wax from carpet. The heat melts the wax and capillary action draws the liquid wax up into the paper. Fold it over and repeat with a non-waxy section. Worked great for me. Polish off the base of your iron with a paper towel or rag before it completely cools.
You can also get wax residue out of candle votives easily with heat. Put the votive in a small saucepan, add water around the votive (just a half inch will do), heat on low until the wax melts; remove the votive carefully and pour off melted wax, polish the inside with a paper towel, and presto.
November 10th, 2009 at 11:43 am
chacha1 (41)–we tried that on candle wax in the carpet and it didn’t work. Maybe because the candle was red (it was Christmas time). Nothing seems to be capable of removing red stains from a light colored carpet.
We had a door to door salesman come in with one of those Billy Mays type cleaners, swearing that his snake oil could remove any stain. So I showed him the red stain in the carpet and told him I’d buy a couple of gallons from him if he could remove the stain from our carpet. 45 minutes and a lot of sweat later, he left a beaten man. In fact, he didn’t even go to any of the neighbors houses after that, he left the neighborhood entirely.
November 10th, 2009 at 12:27 pm
this is not a cleaning hack, but it’s a cola hack.
I’m an emergency department physician, and I see a good number of people who come to the emergency department with food stuck in their throats. Yes, sometimes it’s just a feeling of irritation in their throats from being scratched by food, and not an actual piece of food. But when it is, we do call GI specialists a lot of the time and get a scope put down your throat to take a look and possibly take it out. I learned this trick from another ED physician to chug a 20 oz bottle of Coke (he says it has to be brand name Coke and not generic cola) before you run to the ED. I’ve seen this work in the ED twice like a charm.
just don’t use it if you swallowed something actually dangerous or sharp.
that might save you a few bucks co-pay someday - not to mention an uncomfortable scope down your throat. or you could just chew your food.
November 10th, 2009 at 12:45 pm
Bugspray! Actually, almost any of the “old style” propellants, but I’ve found bugspray about the best.
Good for removing permanent ink from car doors without scratching or tarnishing the surface; and the sticky residue left by over-glued tags on glass/plastic ornaments.
November 10th, 2009 at 1:21 pm
Excellent article. Borax works on the toilet bowl. If you have kids and gum you have problems. If gum gets in their hair peanut butter works to sofen and you can wash with shampoo. For clothes or carpet ice the area then you can scrape it off. I have also used rubbing alochol to remove marker from the wall be careful not to use too much or you will take the paint off.
November 10th, 2009 at 1:33 pm
Nothing works on toilets as well as Saniflush did. Nothing. It is a shame it is no longer sold.
November 10th, 2009 at 1:59 pm
@don
by “old style” propellants do you mean Freon? Freon by itself is an interesting and very effective cleaner. At work we have had an awful time coming up with anything comparable for some of the delicate parts we have. Alas Freon is now a no-no.
November 10th, 2009 at 2:02 pm
I used the paper towel + iron trick to get red wax out of a beige carpet. It is still possible to see red if you put your eye right to the spot, but it’s completely invisible when standing (which most people do in our hallway).
To get candle stubs or wax out of containers I put them in the freezer. They snap right out after just a few minutes.
I use vinegar and baking soda for 90% of our cleaning. Partly to save money, but also because I am sensitive to some chemical cleaners. The smell of carpet cleaner gives me a pounding headache and upset stomach. Bleach is also something I don’t want in my house. For germy areas, peroxide + vinegar kills nearly everything.
November 10th, 2009 at 2:15 pm
For getting stains out of clothing without risking the colors in the clothes, use liquid dish soap. I’ve gotten week old dried blood out of a turquoise shirt with it - fill the kitchen sink with cold water, rub the soap in. Might take two or three times, but it’s gone for good. I’ve also used it to get out ground-in dark chocolate from a white knit shirt.
November 10th, 2009 at 2:27 pm
During Portland’s two-week-long snow storm last year, I was suddenly overwhelmed with the desire to clean my oven (which was odd, since I’d never cleaned it before). Being snowed in, I couldn’t run to the store for oven cleaner, and even if I could have, I didn’t want to shut my family up in the house with oven cleaner fumes anyway. To the internet I went…
Baking soda is like magic pixie dust, I have decided. I now buy it in those huge Costco bags. I sprinkled the oven thoroughly with baking soda, sprayed it with water, and left it overnight. The baked-on oven guck peeled right off. I couldn’t believe it. It left a bit of white residue, but who’s looking inside my oven anyway? And it’s obviously non-toxic, since it’s edible.
I use the same technique to clean the stove top, though it’s not quite as effective, and a combination of banking soda & white vinegar for the toilet. I use vinegar for cleaning counter tops, mirrors, floors, etc.
For hard water stains on sinks, bathtub, etc. (not painted surfaces), I use a small square of drywall screen. It has solved problems that I thought were permanent.
I also make my own laundry detergent out of grated ivory soap (I like Zote better, but can’t find it anywhere since the “Mexican” market closed), washing soda (from the laundry aisle), and Borax. Doesn’t actually save a ton of money, but I started all this to minimize the use of potentially toxic chemicals; saving money is just a little bonus.
The only cleaning products I buy now are dish soap and dishwasher detergent–haven’t found any DIY recipes that actually work. I use vinegar in the rinse dispenser, though.
November 10th, 2009 at 2:48 pm
@ Lindsay #2, I didn’t see anyone come in with a good fix for your rusty map. If it is still legible despite the rust, you might consider just spraying it down with clear Rustoleum. Sealing the metal stops the oxidizing process. … Oxidation is actually a conversion process, as I understand it, not just a surface soil; removing the rust might leave nothing underneath but a thinner piece of clean metal.
November 10th, 2009 at 3:16 pm
If you get grease or oil (from food, not your car) on your clothes, they’ll come out really easy if you just rub some dishwashing liquid into the spots just before popping the clothes in the wash.
I think Americans call dishwashing liquid dish soap. Anyway, it’s what you put in the sink before you clean up after dinner.
November 10th, 2009 at 3:24 pm
@Tyler - another reason for using simple household ingredients for cleaning is to cut down on your exposure to toxic chemicals. Sure you can buy something that takes the soap scum and calcium off your shower walls but do you have any idea what’s in it? The bottles typically tell you to wear gloves and work in a well ventilated area! So why risk exposure when rubbing a cut lemon over them will work just as well? Even things like rubbing alcohol are less toxic than the cleaners you can buy in the shops - and they ARE cheaper.
November 10th, 2009 at 5:16 pm
I like to keep Citrasolv in my arsenal. It’s good for pet stains on carpeting or fabrics, and removes sticker goo.
We once found an online red-wine remover recipe that has worked for us: a fresh mix of Dawn dishwashing liquid mixed with hydrogen peroxide.
November 10th, 2009 at 5:55 pm
Baking soda and vinegar. I’d spent hours trying to get stains off the bottom of our “stainless” steel sink with different store-bought cleaning products - no success. Sprinkled baking soda on the sink and poured white vinegar over it. The stains wiped off instantly and the sink looked brand-new.
November 10th, 2009 at 6:12 pm
Rust on sheet metal: Vintage breweriana collectors use an oxalic acid solution to clean up dump cans or tin signs. You can find oxalic in the paint prep (TSP, turpentine, etc) section of most home improvement stores.
Baking soda and vinegar: great for bathroom drain maintenance. I make a thick but pourable slurry of baking soda and water first, send it down the drain, wait a few minutes for it to coat the gunk, and follow with a cup (sink) or two (bath) of vinegar. As with all drain cleaners, keep your face away from the action and have sufficient ventilation.
Blood: I learned the saliva trick mentioned in a post above at the knees of two Southern grandmothers and it hasn’t failed me yet.
November 10th, 2009 at 7:28 pm
WD-40 for oil stains is the best. My son put his bike in the back of a friends car and the grease from the chain got all over his cloth seats. I sprayed WD-40 on some q-tips and just wiped it off. If you get grease on a shirt, spray some WD-40 on the spot let it sit for a few minutes then rub in some liquid dish soap over entire spot then wash as usual. WD-40 is used to loosen grease in hinges so it can loosen the grease in your spot.
November 11th, 2009 at 2:03 am
The best red-wine remover is Club Soda. Works like a charm, even after the stain has set for a while.
For example - I spilled chiraz on my satin & lacy shirt while out one night. Hours later when I got home, I poured the Club Soda over the shirt and the entire stain disappeared like magic.
I’ve also used Club Soda to get drops out of my couch cushions.
November 11th, 2009 at 2:20 am
Hi! Here are a few things that work: Coke Cola~~people who have stomach feeding tubes sometimes get clogged pour in coke & it will unclog it
vinegar~~pour several cups in toilet & leave overnight , use toilet brush on it in morning & will remove all build up& mineral stains
cornstarch~~ mix some cornstarch with warm water & wash your windows with it , they will be the cleanest ever
polyester cloth~~ just take a piece of polyester & scrub off scuff marks on floors
kerosene~~ soak metal items in it overnight & the rust will come off
November 11th, 2009 at 8:27 am
@54 Nicky at Not My Mother
And what makes you think the main ingredient in those cleaners isn’t rubbing alcohol, or some other solvent?
Getting rubbing alcohol all over your hands are just as harsh as those “harsh chemicals” in those bottles.
Go see what happens if you have a bottle of rubbing alcohol open in a small, enclosed area. Most solvents used are volatile and will evaporate quickly, and therefore, easily inhaled.
Rubbing alcohol is just as toxic and dangerous as the chemicals you find in the commercial cleaners, they just warn you about the dangers that people are ignorant to. I work in a lab, and if you don’t wear gloves when handling a lot of ethanol (you know, the alcohol that you can drink, and is also a poison) your hands will be dry and skin will be cracked.
November 11th, 2009 at 9:34 am
There are some great comments here. Could you do a follow up post incorporating these posts and other resources from the web and books? Actually, perhaps tqo posts would be better. One for ‘everyday frugal cleaning’ and one for ‘emergency frugal savers’ it would help me and I’m sure many others.
November 11th, 2009 at 12:51 pm
Thanks to all for the vinegar/baking soda suggestion–we’re going to give that a try in moy house…
November 11th, 2009 at 3:21 pm
@Steven at 61
I’m not going to get into a debate in the comments of someone else’s blog but even if the main ingredient is rubbing alcohol - which I admit, I haven’t needed to use - buying it on its own is way cheaper than buying multiple “household” cleaners that are supposedly for different uses.
November 11th, 2009 at 4:01 pm
Just leave the blood satined cloth in cold water and it will come off in no time.
November 12th, 2009 at 4:34 pm
For cleaning chrome, the cola isn’t necessary. Aluminum foil (or steel wool) and water work wonders.
November 14th, 2009 at 2:00 am
A couple weeks ago after working on a transmission I discovered i’d forgotten to buy soap recently. the thought occured to me that tooth paste can be used to clean chrome, why not hands? took about a pea sized amount, and I was very greasy when started, and minty fresh when done.
November 14th, 2009 at 10:34 pm
1) I tried using several bathroom cleaners to remove the white discoloration from my old chrome-plated bathtub faucet, but none of them made any difference. Then I moistened a microfiber cleaning cloth with water, rubbed the faucet with one finger behind the cloth, and it gleamed like new.