Cleaning products are certainly necessary to keep your
home spotless, but they can also be toxic to your family's
health and the environment. Instead of using commercial,
chemical-based products, which can add to problems associated
with allergies, asthma, sinusitis and bronchitis, look in your
cupboards for simple homemade solutions instead.
Baking Soda
This common household product not only keeps things fresh in
the fridge and adds to your baking needs, it also cleans,
deodorizes, softens water and scours.
Lemon
As one of the strongest food-acids, this citrus-based fruit is
a powerful weapon against household bacteria, soap scum and
hard water deposits. It can also be used to clean and shine
brass and copper, as well as scrub dishes, surfaces and stains.
Mixed with olive oil, it can also serve a as a great hardwood
furniture polish.
Vinegar
Mixed with water, vinegar can naturally cut grease, remove
mildew, disinfect and deodorize. Effective as a cleanser for
surfaces in the bathroom and kitchen, it can also be used as a
natural fabric softener.
Cornstarch
This product can effectively clean windows, polish furniture,
shampoo carpets and rugs.
Borax
This sodium borate works wonders as an all-purpose cleaner and
can also be used as laundry soap. In addition, you can turn to
borax when you need to clean wallpaper, painted walls or
painted surfaces.
Salt
Everyone has salt in their home, so next time you need to scrub
something, mix it with lime juice and use it for such things as
removing rust.
Club Soda
Youve probably already been instructed to dab a little
club soda on your clothes in order to remove a stain, but you
might not know that club soda is also good for cleaning
glass.
Coca Cola
You may think twice about drinking this as a beverage after
reading this, but the popular soft drink is often used by the
highway patrol for cleaning blood off the roads. It is also
good for removing rust spots from your car, removing stains in
your toilet bowl, removing grease spots and cleaning road haze
from your windshield.
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