Entries Tagged as 'Living Area'

Spring Cleaning: Living Room/Great Room/Family Room

April 10th, 2008 10 Comments

Ivy says:

This has been a hard one for me to write, because I have a small house. My living room or family room or great room or whatever you want to call it is also my office, sewing room, dining room, etc, etc, etc. So the way I spring clean my living room wouldn’t necessarily be the same as yours. For example, I’m going through all my files and cleaning out everything that’s too old. Most people don’t store their files in their living room. Anyway, I hope this suits most people’s needs for living room spring cleaning.

  • As usual, start at the top. Dust the walls (Y’all, mine were horrid! I would have definitely won the Home Ec 101 seal of disapproval!) and light fixtures and ceiling fan if you have one. Knock all the cobwebs down too. If your ceiling isn’t too horribly tall, dust it too.
  • Take all your throw pillows outside and let them hang out in the sun for awhile to freshen. Take down any curtains, throws, and other such items and wash them. Give your blinds a good washing. Take any area rugs outside and beat them. (Fun for all, right!?)
  • Pick up and organize everything. This is a good time to go through your media like your DVDs and video games and take them to someplace like Digital Planet (That’s where I go. Naturally, if you’re not local to Murfreesboro, Tennessee, find a similar local joint) to make a few bucks off stuff you don’t watch or play anymore.
  • Dust everything. And I mean everything, kids. Pick up all your electronic equipment and dust under it. This sounds odd, but dust your cords, too. Mine seem to collect dust and cat hair. I wish they’d collect something useful, like money, but no such luck. Don’t forget to dust your picture frames! My boss when I was a maid always said you can tell a truly good housekeeper by how dusty the tops of their picture frames are. Because of that, I always dust my picture frames, even if I’m too lazy to dust anything else, ha!
  • Your maid may not do windows, but you’re going to have to. Wash them inside and out. My mom says windows are the “eyes” of a home. Keep your home’s “eyes” clean!
  • Move all furniture away from the walls. Dust the baseboards. If they’re still funky, give them a good washdown.
  • While you’ve got the furniture moved out, vacuum the floors. If you are like me and like to rearrange the furniture, go ahead and do so.
  • Move all the furniture back and then vacuum the rest of the floors. Wash down your doors and switchplates and all that fun stuff that gets funky.
  • Take all your knickknacks outside and throw them at a neighbor you don’t like. Okay, just kidding, but do you need as many knickknacks as you have? Consider cutting down. It’ll make all your dusting easier!
  • Put all your curtains, blinds, throw pillows, area rugs, etc. back where they belong.
  • Enjoy your shiny clean living room!

I feel like I may have left something out here, and I don’t know what it could be. As I type, I keep remembering things I’ve left out, ha! I know you fab commenters have got my back, so let me know if there’s anything I’ve left out!

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Laminate Lament

March 31st, 2008 2 Comments

Dear Home-Ec 101,

Hi! I hope you lovely gals can help me…

My husband and I are remodeling a house, and we installed laminate, faux wood floors. We probably did it backwards, because since installing the floors, we’ve had plumbers and tilers in…and now the floors are filthy! We need advice on how to clean them. The manufacturer (Shaw *cough*) were of no help at all; they provided no tips other than encouraging us to buy their “special” laminate-cleaning product. They never addressed the fact that we’re talking about a lot of dust, drywall, and grime here. You can’t get laminate flooring fully wet, so regular mopping is out. We have a layer of remodeling dust that seemingly won’t be phased by a broom and Swiffer Wet. Also, we’re talking about an entire houseful of laminate flooring. Can you help?

Laminerd

Ivy says:

I’ve used several methods to clean my laminate flooring and I don’t have a clear favorite way to clean them. It seems to get randomly streaky even with methods I’ve used before that worked just fine. I know, weird. Here are the two methods I’ve used that seem to work the best, though.

For really dirty floors, first vacuum thoroughly using the bare floor setting on your vacuum cleaner. Then get a mop bucket, rags,  and well diluted vinegar.   Get down on your hands and knees to wash and dry the floor. Just make sure you’re wringing out the wet rag thoroughly so it’s not soaking wet. If the floor is particularly grimy be prepared to go through a few rags.  Some wet is fine, though, since you’re immediately wiping the floor dry – just be sure not to get it soaking wet. The only problem I’ve had with this is sometimes the floor ends up streaky. I’ve heard it’s because of the hard water in my area, so if you live in a hard water area, try using distilled water.

The other thing I’ve found that works really well is Windex. My only concern is while it works for my flooring, it may not for yours- test an inconspicuous spot before doing the whole floor. I’ve found that Windex works really well, without leaving streaks.  During mud season, when my floors are really dirty, I’ll do the vinegar and water routine and then go over it with Windex to keep the streakies away.

Good luck!

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Inky upholstery, oh noes!

February 14th, 2008 6 Comments

Dear Home Ec 101,

Hello! My three year old son decided it would be fun to draw on our car upholstery with black pen.

In the past I have been able to use hairspray on crayon with wonderful success (couch and table cloth), but I have never attempted it on pen. Any tips or am I better of just leaving the unsightly mess? I’d hate to try something and have it look worse.

Thanks,

Inky in Indy

retrochick.JPG Ivy says:

Give a little kid a pen and they will create a masterpiece. Unfortunately, if they don’t have any paper on hand, they’ll draw on anything that happens to be around, whether it’s their own skin or your walls or your car upholstery.

Fortunately, cleaning it isn’t that bad. You’re going the right direction with thinking hairspray, but it is the alcohol in the hairspray that does the actual cleaning. So skip the middle man and get some rubbing alcohol.

First, blot the stain to get up any excess ink. Don’t rub. Nowhere in this process should you rub*- rubbing will cause the stain to spread, so blot only. Then put some alcohol on a rag and blot again with the alcohol. Keep alcoholing and blotting until the stain comes up.

I find it really amusing that we’re using rubbing alcohol to clean something that is blot-only, but perhaps that is only me. Good luck!

*If you have a very large ink blot, you may have to do a tiny bit of rubbing. Work from the outside of the blot inward to make the stain smaller.

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The Great New Year Clean-up: Books

January 2nd, 2008 21 Comments

retrochick.JPGIvy says:

If you’re anything like me (and hey, you might not be, I’m strange), you have too many books. Go on, admit it, you have more books than you really need. Go through them. Keep the ones you want to read over and over, and keep the ones you plan on reading in the next 3 months, keep the reference books you might really refer to and get rid of everything else. I promise, it won’t hurt. Much.

What to do with all those books?

  • Give them away on Freecycle
  • Post an ad on Craigslist, either giving them away or selling them for a very nominal fee
  • Donate them to Freecycle
  • How many Bibles do you have? More than you need? Contact your local church to see where they can be put to good use.
  • Contact your local library to find out where you can donate books to worthy causes.
  • Set up a book swap with your friends. But don’t get too many or you’ll be in the same boat!

Once you’ve purged all those extra books, resist the urge to get a whole lot more! That’s going to be my problem.

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Kitchen Grease: Not for Your Loveseat

November 14th, 2007 1 Comment

Hello ladies!

I’ve asked my mom, I’ve asked my friends, and I don’t know why I didn’t ask you two first.

Here’s the skinny: we bought our first new furniture early last year; a couch and a recliner.  My husband works in a kitchen, so he comes home sweaty and covered with kitchen grease and steam and all that good stuff (Ivy, you know what I’m talking about).  After a year and a half of him coming home exhausted and flopping into his beloved chair, we’ve got a nice dark mark right where his head rests.

The chair is covered with regular upholstery but was sprayed with Scotch Guard type stuff when it was manufactured.  Any bright ideas on how to get the kitchen funk out of our living room?  Other than covering it up with a towel, which I’ll likely be doing anyway.

Signed,

Mrs. Danny Zuko

Heather says:

After spending nearly ten years in restaurants, I do know the particular funk of which you speak. Before you do anything, I want you to look for your stain / warranty information.  There will probably be a phone number to call.  If you cannot find your paperwork, look up the manufacturer online and see if you can find care information.  If you have a warranty, you do not want to void it by improperly caring for your furniture.

My first suggestion is to try cornstarch.  Use a generous amount and rub it into the stain.  Work it in gently with either an old toothbrush or the brush attachment on your vacuum (while it is not running).   Vacuum the area thoroughly then wipe with a slightly damp rag.  You may need to repeat this process several times.  I have also heard of using this technique with salt, cornmeal, or talcum powder.  My only concern with salt or corn meal is they may act as an abrasive and weaken fibers.

If this is ineffective try using baby wipes on the affected area.

Your care tag will likely have some guidelines:

W – water based cleaners

S- solvent based

SW – Water or Solvent

X – Vacuum only

For tags marked W  try using diluted dishwashing soap.  Gently rub it into the area, use a dry cloth to soak up as much as possible before using clear water to rinse the area.  Blot, then blot some more.  Finally fold a white towel, place it on the armrest, and weight it with a large book.  Every hour or two change the towel for a dry one and replace the weight until the fabric is dry to the touch.   Use a fan in the room after the towel has been removed to further encourage thorough drying.

If your care tag is marked S, try an upholstery foam but please check it in an inconspicuous spot first and follow all the label directions.

Good luck.

Send your household questions to helpme@home-ec101.com.

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