Have no anxiety at all, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, make your requests known to God. Then the peace of God that surpasses all understanding will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.
Phil 4:6-7



Showing posts with label Household. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Household. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 03, 2017

Setting the Table


Today's writing prompt for 31 Days is "your favorite family tradition." This 31-day exercise may seriously challenge my memory in other ways, but I know my favorite family tradition. It's exclusively mine, and I can't say that about much in my house. No one participates in this tradition until it's time to sit down to a holiday meal, because my favorite tradition is setting the table.

I don't have any problem with people who choose to use paper plates and napkins to make holiday meals easier (the dishwashers at my house might just prefer I did). But the joy in serving meals to others, for me, is 40% good food and 60% beautiful tables.








Ever since my mother moved to a condo, all of the family meals take place at my house. At some holidays, Thanksgiving for example, we have at least 18 people, depending on who brings a girlfriend or boyfriend, which can make table-setting a challenge. But we have three large tables, and lots of chairs, and no one cares if the plates are mixed colors and the flatware doesn't match if there are lit candles and flowers and cloth napkins, and then good food.







As the holiday approaches I start polishing silver, choosing serving dishes, ironing tablecloths that have been in storage for months, dusting the plates, and washing the crystal. I plan the centerpieces and even place cards. All the good stuff gets used and some of the everyday stuff -- which I have had to buy more of just to accommodate a large crowd. I plan the centerpieces and even place cards. We have no "kids' table" at our house any more, or at least not yet, so everyone just mixes and sometimes the young adults end up together and sometimes the teens and the elders end up together. To me, seeing my family enjoying a meal at a table that has been set with love, in the best family tradition.




"All great change in America
 begins at the dinner table." 

Ronald Reagan

Monday, January 26, 2015

I'll take that snow day and raise you some confetti



I realize that statement makes no sense. I'm feeling the loss of my weekend and it has made me a little loopy.

This weekend was the start of the room makeover -- Faith's room makeover. Maybe you remember we bought her a large tree with owls decal for Christmas. It was part of her master plan: "I want my room to be purple -- two walls morning purple, and two walls night time purple, with purple owls and a big tree."

Lest you think I indulge my daughter's every whim, I don't. But six years ago we painted her room "Fairest of them All" pink, and she no longer wanted to be the princess pink girl, so I consented, as long as it was a gift (no freebie makeovers). So, for Christmas she received the decal tree and owls (large tree, life-size owls -- creepy if you ask me. Do you want owls watching you sleep?) and the promise of paint. She talked her dad into starting this weekend.

The dad man does paint prep. He paints trim. He cleans up. He does not paint walls. By default, I paint walls, which I didn't really mind in my youth. But, I'm getting a little old for climbing ladders and I'd really rather pay someone to do it, but that was not in the budget (it's never in the budget).

I started Saturday with the night time purple on the two walls which can not be seen from the hall -- good strategic plan because this purple, called "romantic moment" by Behr, is what I called "oh-my-gosh-this-sure-as-sh*t-is-purple." There is nothing in nature quite so purple as this purple. Here's an ipad pic:




I don't normally work on Sunday, but I knew I wouldn't be able to paint all week, so I planned to paint after Mass yesterday. Our pastor used to say the only work on Sunday should be something you can not do any other day, so I thought I was safe, but I may have made God mad (just kidding). The second color is called "confetti." It's a shade lighter than the above, but still most definitely purple. It's more like sunset purple, or I guess in Faith's eyes, sunrise purple. I had just started on the one long blank wall with "confetti" and had painted about 4 feet of wall, top to bottom. I was on the top of the ladder cutting in at the ceiling when I had a serious mechanical malfunction -- my paint pan came off the holder and hit the ground, paint -- "confetti" -- flying up everywhere. I had a drop cloth, but it was only about a foot out from the wall and not quite long enough to cover the square footage of the enormous splash. There was confetti everywhere! I definitely yelled a bad word (I would have loved to have been at the little neighbor girl's dinner table last night when she told the story of what happened because she and Faith were playing in the room next door). Doug and Faith both came running, and the dad man was not very happy (well, neither was I) and I think he swore her room would be purple until the day she leaves home, or longer.

If you ever need to get wet latex paint out of carpet, you need a wet vac, fortunately something we have, and a lot of hot water. I haven't seen the carpet in true daylight, nor sunlight, because it was snowing all day yesterday, but it looked pretty good in lamplight. Doug would have liked to rip the carpet up and replace it with hardwood floor, something he wants to do in the upstairs, but that's not in the budget right now.

I eventually finished the walls, just before dinner, and I can honestly say that I do not like purple paint. I do not like it on the wall, I do not like it when it falls. I do not like it here or there, I do not like it any where. 

But we're stuck with it for forever. Or until we can afford a painter.

The decal goes up in two weeks, the curtains (reusing the green gingham curtains from the pink and green room) hopefully back up today. She gets the bedding for her birthday in February, so I'll be sure to show you final pics when it's all done. I only wish I had taken before and after pictures of confetti all over the carpet. I think whoever named purple paint "confetti" put a curse on it!

For now I'm taking my snow day on the sofa. You'll find me there with a heating pad and a cup of tea. Don't wake me if I'm sleeping.




Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Turns out it's a crafty day




Ever since the kids in the neighborhood started school (actually a couple days after the neighborhood kids started school) things quieted down around here. Because we don't start lessons until next week, at first I told Faith to stay in the backyard or in the house since our "exemption from compulsory education" letter had not yet arrived (I had her convinced the truant officer was waiting around every corner, and I am not completely sure we don't have a neighbor or two who would report a child not in school -- it's true). If I let her, she would just ride her bike around or skate around all by herself just waiting for someone, anyone to come out (there are a few other homescoolers in our neighborhood). I hate that -- her riding around all by herself. I don't know why it bothers me, but it seems so -- not constructive, and, in this day, mildly dangerous. She stayed in for a few days, or played with the dog in the backyard, but she had ants in her pants. Finally the letter arrived, and then she rode her bike around or skated around all by herself just waiting for someone, anyone to come out. Oh the trials of being a lone homeschooler. This week she has settled down (so far) and seems content to craft in her room or play with her American Girl (AG) dolls. An AG magazine arrived on Saturday so that may have something to do with her willingness to stay seated. The girl just never stops.

As Faith has settled, I have been able to get some chaplets and rosaries made that I owe a few people, and some sewing. The house is "ship-shape and Bristol fashion" (which female British character used that phrase in recent history?), and the laundry caught up. I know that will all go to pot next week, when lessons start. Actually, it will probably go to pot tomorrow (no pun intended) when I start the prep for a colonoscopy (and endoscopy) on Thursday. I dread this procedure so much. Actually, it's not the procedure, it's the prep. I know that no one enjoys it. Truly, has no one come up with a better way to do this? Can't we just wave a magic wand over the colon and look for polyps? I am just not good with drinking large quantities of liquid. I have to go to the store today to see if I can find something to drink tomorrow before I have to start drinking the "prep liquid." Tomorrow is an all-clear-liquids day. I told Taylor (my future daughter-in-law) that I probably won't lose a pound doing it either. I could eat an ice cream sundae and gain three, but fast for a day and a half and not lose an ounce. Any suggestions for making the whole thing more pleasant less distasteful would be appreciated. If I could take a sleeping pill and sleep through it, I would, but I don't think that works when one needs to frequently run to the bathroom (TMI?).

Because we were having a relaxed morning today I worked on a little project I had purchased the supplies for, but they were just sitting (like so many of my projects). When we renovated the hall bath for the kids, we never replaced the towel rack. Most of the kids shower in the master bath, but occasionally, and especially when Taylor visits, or on Sunday morning when we're always scrambling (never learn), someone uses that bathroom for the shower. And then no one ever knows whose towel is whose, so they get washed with each use. So I bought five 3M hooks, a little acrylic paint and, voilĂ , today we have a hook for each kid. Faith chatted while I worked and we listened to Nicole Mullen music and, all-in-all, had a good time. By the time I was finished, Faith had a clipboard and markers and was planning a Halloween party. Oh, that girl! She needs to be a social committee chair/activities director some day!









If you are not confident in your painting ability (mine wasn't great, but good enough) you could purchase initials at a craft store. I'm just too cheap to do that!




Wednesday, March 28, 2012

(3/28)...streaming




Not to belabor my "corner" post (and yet I will) I wanted to mention that the little arrangement I created above the bookcase was not at all what I planned for that wall.

A month or so ago I saw this on Pinterest. Because we use multi-colored Fiestaware to eat from, I thought that plate rack would look darling on that wall, with a variety of my Fiestaware tucked in between the slats. Doug looked at it and figured out how to make one, but, ultimately, I realized that I have about 14 dinner plates, two platters and about ten small plates, and some days they all get used. It would not be very practical to be taking them down and putting them back a couple times a week. I would have to buy more plates to do it and between that and the cost of the wood, it just wasn't necessary. I bought the little print block that I used ($8 plus shipping), and I bought a frame at 50% ($7), plus a plate hanger for $1.69 at the neighborhood hardware store), but everything I used to create my little corner was already in my house. Those are the best kinds of redos, if you ask me. Putting things out or moving things that don't normally get visibility.


~~~~~


I saw two, actually three, good movies lately. The Help and The King's Speech both came a couple weekends ago from Netflix (I know -- I'm a little slow on these things).

My boys actually watched The Help with me (ages 20 and 15), and if you've seen the film you just know what part they liked best. Ugh. It was a good film and fairly true to the book, except the awful women were actually more awful than I can ever imagine a human being.

(Except I guess I know people are worse. Sigh.)

The Help made me hungry for fried chicken, and I have indulged twice now since seeing the film. And of course I used Crisco. Stay tuned at my food blog for recipes. Yum.



The King's Speech was wonderful in every way (except the bad words, which I deny were necessary). Colin Firth (sigh) was just about perfect, and such an interesting story, and one about fortitude and honesty. Refreshing.

Ironically I am in the midst of a related film (which I did not know was related when I watched The King's Speech) called The Lost Prince. The lost prince, Prince John, would have been King George the VI's (Colin Firth's character) uncle. He had epilepsy as a child and was cloistered away with a caretaker who fought for him to be reunited with the family. If you saw The Forsyte Saga, you'd recognize John's caretaker, Lalla, as Irene Forsyte. Also a very good story, and fits right in with all the anglo films I have seen lately.


~~~~~


This past weekend my mother and I took two young men (the same 20 and 15-year-olds) to see October Baby. I didn't make them go, merely offered, and by fortune they had nothing better to do (and with the offer of popcorn, candy and Mountain Dew...). I almost didn't offer to take them after reading the St. Paul, MN, review that Margaret linked to. The reviewer said the movie is one big lecture. There is almost nothing worse than a lecture -- from the perspective of teenagers especially. I didn't want them to be turned off, you know.

All I can say is Chris Hewitt at the Twin Cities paper is dead wrong. There was nothing about the movie that lectured. Not one bit. It was authentic and real. The plot is very plausible and the emotions the characters experience true (and if you have or ever was a teenage daughter, you might flinch a bit at the authenticity of the emotions, but yet they are still true). If when faced with the truth one feels lectured, well...maybe you have been denying the truth. If you see a young women who survived an abortion and you feel something, then you are real. You should feel something. You should know that what her mother chose was wrong. Too many people in this country have accepted the lies about unborn babies being "blobs of tissue." Face the truth, folks. The truth is not a lecture.

After the movie the boys said it was "good." I don't think they were placating me (they didn't say "awesome" nor "awful'). Josh said the actors probably wouldn't win Emmies, and I agree. They weren't Colin Firth or Geoffrey Rush. But that's part of the real and authentic presentation of the story. I highly recommend it. And if you are thinking of taking young people, know that there are a few verbal references to "being with someone" (sexually), and the obvious abortion/unwed mother connections. Be sure to stay past the beginning of the credits -- the actor who plays the birth mother has her own real connection.



Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Just one corner at a time




I have had a hard time this year getting into the spring cleaning. Partly I think because it got so warm so fast and it no longer felt like spring, but partly because I just get overwhelmed with what has to be done.When you tackle one whole room it's just so much.

I know, I sound rather whimpy, don't I?






I tackled Faith's room when she was sick a few weeks ago. She was captive in bed with a fever and so I said,"We're cleaning this room. You lay there and tell me what I can throw away." Well, that really didn't work so well, because she is 10 and doesn't want to throw away anything. But she did (when she wasn't looking) and her room got cleaned. Of course, she's 10 and it stayed clean for two days, but at least I knew the shelves were wiped off and the baseboards cleaned. In other words, it was deep down clean even if the clutter gathered moments after I left.

I am slightly embarrassed to say, however, that it took me a whole day to clean one bedroom. Sheesh. There was an awful lot of junk to deal with, and every drawer needed sorted, but still, it was one room.






In the past week I have taken to cleaning one little corner of a room. It doesn't take all day, but I still feel like I have accomplished something. Frankly every part of the house doesn't need to be cleaned in the spring -- it's not like we burn gas and sooty candles for light, or have dirt roads outside. But parts of the house do need to be cleaned and reorganized. Cleaning a corner also gives the opportunity to switch things up a little and make it prettier, or maybe just different.




This pretty figure of Our Blessed Mother and the Infant Jesus was found in an antique shop. I think it was a planter originally.


Today I cleaned the corner of my kitchen where the school books are housed. It's the opposite end from the cooking area on the other side of the table. The white blinds needed cleaning (I hate, hate that job) and I pulled the bookcase out and cleaned all the baseboards around it. Everything came off the shelves so I could dust and they I sorted through what to keep and what to throw as I put it back up.






A beautiful scripture verse, printed in a pretty font and framed in a frame I already owned, repurposed.


I had nothing on the wall above, so I took the opportunity to make a pretty arrangement.



A beautiful card saved for just this purpose and placed in a frame I found for 50% off at Joann, a pretty plate from the china cabinet, and a little print block I bought a couple weeks ago -- Mother of Tenderness.








One tip for cleaning blinds -- use baby wipes. They are way cheaper than cleaning wipes, so it's not a costly method, and it's so much easier than constantly rinsing and wringing a rag. Plus the wipes are thin and it's easy to get them in between the blinds. I also use baby wipes for cleaning white woodwork. They work great.


Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Homemade Clorox Cleanup





Pin It


One aspect of Pinterest that I love is inspiration for homemade goodies -- food and household products.

If you have a basic "pantry" of cleaning products you can really make any cleaner you need.

I ran out of homemade Clorox cleanup yesterday and I just Googled for a recipe for homemade. I found several but they were mostly all the same:

1/4 cup bleach
1 T. dish detergent (not dishwasher detergent)
warm water

Do you know how much Clorox Cleanup costs? It's not cheap. And it's clearly mostly water. I cleaned my kitchen sink and it worked great. Now I can refill all my bathroom bottles for pennies.


Wednesday, November 23, 2011

The best part



the day before Thanksgiving, table not yet set

I had to run into the pharmacy today to pick up a prescription and the pharmacy tech who was on duty is a woman my husband knows (so she is very friendly to me). She asked if I am cooking tomorrow and we shared numbers of guests, who's cooking and all that jazz. She said it's so much work, and now her family just has a potluck and she roasts a turkey. I mentioned to her that it's really not all the cooking that takes so much time for me, but the getting the house ready, making sure all the best linens, china, silver, crystal are ready to go. She replied that her family just uses paper plates, and they eat in the garage so they can squirt it off later. She's a really nice woman, and I really am not judging her. We all do it differently and no way is more "right" than another.

But for me, for me, it's my mother's china, and my mother-in-law's stemware, the best linens, the candles in glass, the cornucopia, and turkey water pitcher that make this holiday so wonderful. I just wouldn't do it if I limited myself to paper plates and tables set up in the garage.

All I can say is, if you're not using something special for tomorrow's dinner...glasses that used to be on another woman's Thanksgiving table, china that someone else used to load with their huge Thanksgiving meal, linens that you washed and ironed for a loved one to wipe his mouth, a butter dish that you polished and shined just so someone else would feel that you went out of your way to make Thanksgiving special, I urge you to change the way you do it. It's the best part.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Creating a Clothespin Bag

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With all of our modern technology and multi-tasking devices these days, it almost seems absurd to create an object that has one simple purpose. But I think it's for that exact reason that I love my little clothespin bag. Its old-fashioned single-purposeness takes me back to a day when we did things one at a time, slowly and with intent to do it right the first time. Those were the days. (Now everything is instant, everybody gets a redo, and nobody seems to try very hard at anything.)

The two best things about my little bag, however, are that (1) it was free, and (2) it took less than 30 minutes to make, start to finish.

Here is a little tutorial so that you may create your own. I apologize in advance for the lousy iPhone pictures. My camera battery won't hold a charge and I have to decide whether to invest in a new battery or a new camera (which is just another example of why modern devices aren't as good as the old ones).

I created my clothespin bag out of an old dress shirt that was in my stash. Men's dress shirts are invaluable because even after they get a little ragged around the cuff and collar the fabric still has loads of life left. I never discard an old dress shirt. First I cut off the buttons and save them, and then I put the shirt in my fabric stash for quilt squares or odd jobs such as this. They also make great craft smocks for the little kids -- just cut off the collar and cuffs with a pinking shear (or sew across the cut edges with a zigzag stitch) and turn it around backwards. And if you don't plan to do anything crafty with dad's old shirts, just put them in the dress-up box -- they'll get used.

If you don't have an old men's shirt, choose some fabric from your stash -- something durable but not too heavy. For the sake of this tutorial I am going to assume you will use a shirt --you can ignore that part if you are not.

Starting on your clothespin bag, lay the shirt out on a flat surface and with scissors or a rotary cutter (and board) cut two pieces from the front panels (or the back if you used the front) that are about 11 inches by 18 inches, give or take. If your shirt is smaller or larger than mine you may have more or less room. Cut your pattern to fit your cloth (I love that saying). Just place one front panel on top of the other to cut so they are identical. You may have a pocket on the shirt panel that you feel is "in the way" of cutting one of the panels. Just cut right through the pocket -- it will be on the back panel and it won't matter a bit.


 I just sketched this without a ruler or compass, so my measurements are not at all to scale, nor are my lines straight. ;-)


After you have two identical pieces, take the piece without the pocket (if you have one) and, using a plate or other round object, mark and cut a hole that is approximately five inches across and in the top half of the piece (but centered from side to side). I actually just guesstimated by choosing a center point and folding the fabric into quarters with the spot at the center and then cut a small pie shape, creating a circle in the opened fabric. It's not rocket science. Just make sure the circle is centered and not too large, but large enough that you can fit your hand in. It will seem larger once you get the binding on. I actually think mine is more of an oval now that I look at the photo of the unfilled bag, but it stretches to a circle with the pins in it. If you can make an oval, go for it. It works.

Now, take a piece of binding (I used quilt binding which is wider than standard binding and which I think works well for this purpose, but use what you have in your stash), and pin it to the opening you just created (I started at the side), making certain that you catch enough of the shirt fabric that you have a secure seam. Just slip the open edge of the binding over the fabric edge and pin it in place. Cut the binding when you have pinned it all the way around, just overlapping a little bit of the top edge over the inside edge. Stitch the binding on, overlapping the ends.

Now place the piece with the opening, right side down onto the other piece, which will be right side up. Pin in place. Sew together, using a quarter inch seam allowance, starting at the top just about a quarter inch away from the center point, making sure the stitches are secure at the beginning (use a little back and forth stitching). Stitch all the way around (I curved my corners a bit), ending about a half inch from your starting point across the center line from the starting point, making sure stitches are secure at the end as well. You want to leave this opening in the top seam to slip your hanger through.

Unfortunately the binding is positioned in the picture just so the top opening is obscured.


Trim seam allowance if necessary and iron. Then turn inside out and iron edges again.

Now, take a wire hanger (the kind that the dry cleaners uses for pants -- pull off the cardboard part) and place the wire hanger on top of the clothespin bag. Using a pliers, bend the hanger at the points where it reaches the edges of the bag. Bend it 180 degrees, making sure it isn't stretching the fabric. Mine was just the right size that I could hook the ends together in the center.



Now insert the hanger into the bag, gently slipping it through the opening in the top seam, bottom of the hook first. Now the bag will hang on the clothes line.



The end. (I think. Leave me a comment if I left something out or you have questions.) This little bag won't win any awards for design or creative beauty, but it's free, and easy, and you'll love that you made it every time you use it.

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Thursday, August 11, 2011

Carpet Query

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I may have mentioned ( a few dozen times) that we are renovating the basement for our son who will be commuting to college this year. We will be tearing out the carpet we currently have (it's been destroyed by carpet runs which I never even knew could happen -- live and learn) and we are planning to replace it with carpet tiles, the idea being if one or two tiles get damaged, we can just replace one or two tiles. I have never seen them used, except on the DIY channel, and I wondered if any of my online friends here have any experience with them. I would appreciate your input.

PS Because it is the basement they will be applied directly to the concrete floor.

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Monday, August 08, 2011

Welcome Home

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 I'm joining Rosie at Like Mothers Like Daughters to talk about how our home looks to other people.

Like most folks, I want to have a nice home to present to friends and family, and the occasional stranger who stops by to sell something (actually I really don't care what he thinks), but with three children still at home, and all with different interests and schedules, it doesn't always happen. Shoes are often left on the porch or by the door and baskets of clean and folded laundry are often parked on the front hall bench awaiting a pair of strong arms to carry up the stairs. Dollies and scooters are often left on the porch and the front hall floor is frequently covered in a thin layer of dog hair (even though I sweep at least once a day). Though I may want for my house to be perfect, it almost never is. I can only do my best and hope no one who visits wears white gloves.

 The front walk and the front porch.


 We really use our front porch -- at least when it's not 90 degrees out -- and that makes it a little harder to keep tidy. Doug might leave his newspaper there and Faith might leave her dollies there, so it's just another room to tidy up. Fortunately we can hose it off after Faith chalks on it, and squirt the spider webs from the corners. This year we have some aggressive Virgina Creeper that needs to be tugged down from the brick. I'm thinking about painting that brick, by the way, and wonder what your thoughts are on painted brick.



 Our home is an almost-30 year old central hall tudor style house. Through the front door you can see straight down the front hall and into the kitchen eating area. I always hated that you can see the table from the door, but it is incentive to keep the table cleared off as much as possible. The bench in the hall (the one that occasionally catches laundry baskets) often has a stack of books on it, but that's the only thing that permanently resides there. When we have a crowd for dinner we use the bench at the kitchen table instead of two chairs on the side.


I find the best way to keep the house as tidy as possible is to have and obey the rule "a place for everything and everything in its place." I might set a basket of laundry down for an hour, but by the end of the day it will go upstairs and be put away. And Faith might leave her shoes laying next to the door, but they will get put away before bed. The only way to keep "stuff" from building up is to constantly stay on top of it. Make certain everything has a place and constantly remind people to put their stuff there. It doesn't come naturally, does it? But if we let stuff sit, it never seems to find its way home.


Stepping into the front foyer you can see the living room to the right. It mostly stays clean because the children don't use it for the most part. Doug tells me once in a while that he would like to have a television in there, but then I remind him that a television would make the room inviting to the children and that ends that discussion.


I find that the two groups most responsible for clutter in our home are: our children, who want to acquire more stuff, because stuff is what "it's" all about, and our parents, who are trying to get rid of the stuff that they have acquired, because apparently stuff is really not what "it's" all about.


Doug and I do not, for the most part, acquire anything. We throw things away -- when the kids aren't looking, I throw away cheap plastic crap, toys and games with parts missing, and other stuff that has no use (in my humble opinion). When our parents give us things, we go through them and keep things with meaning and give the rest to charity. I used to have a real problem with stuff my mom and Doug's parents gave us. I felt obliged to keep everything. It was a real revelation when I gave myself permission to keep passing things on. I know that most of the time they just want to get rid of things, so I only keep that which we truly can use or has sentimental value.




I do think that a tidy house is inviting to others. Not only are we sometimes embarrassed by other people's messes (do we really want to see their dirty clothes and messy dishes?) when we go to their house (and our own when they come to ours), but who wants to sit down and visit when you feel like you should pitch in and clean.

I find the one tool that is most helpful to keeping a house tidy is baskets. Remember the rule I mentioned above -- a place for everything? If you keep a reasonable number of baskets and assign very specific things to those baskets (and they are not overflowing with random junk that really belongs elsewhere) you can keep a fairly tidy home without knocking yourself out every day. 
 I also once heard a motivational speaker say "handle each piece of paper once" and that has become very helpful when dealing with stuff in the house. When the mail comes, I take it right to the counter next to the trash can. What is trash goes straight in, and what is a bill goes right in the bill folder on the counter next to the trash can. I have one heavy duty magnetic clip that keeps things that need immediate attention, but everything else gets dealt with promptly. 
The most helpful tip, however, for keeping a tidy home is just not acquiring stuff. For every thing you acquire, get rid of another. Recycle or donate and keep it moving.

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Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Folding a Sheet Set

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Last week Elisa was organizing her linen closet and made the comment that she had given up trying to perfectly fold her fitted sheets. I agree that they are a pain to get smoothed and flattened into something that neatly fits onto the linen closet shelf. That is why years ago I started folding my sheets into nice little packages -- the fitted sheet and pillowcases swaddled tightly within the flat sheet -- so that one just has to grab a "package" to have everything necessary to put clean sheets on the bed (even a husband can do that in the middle of the night!). If you don't have sheet sets per se -- i.e. a matching set -- you will always need a fitted sheet, pillowcases and a flat sheet for every bed, so pair up your odds and ends as much as possible and make some "packages."

It helps to have pulled the sheets from the dryer just as they are dry and not to have a wrinkled mess to fold. That is a very important first step. So if you forgot about them and they sat for the night or several hours during the day, do yourself a favor and run them on a wrinkle release cycle (or about 10 minutes) and then pull them out when they are pliable.

Take the fitted sheet and fold in half crosswise (with a twin sheet you will have almost a square then) and fit the corners into each other -- take a minute and really work at it. Then fold again crosswise so that all the corners are in the same place and, again, fit them as neatly as possible into each other. It's very helpful to have a surface on which to lay the sheet at this point -- the sofa or a table. You need to be able to smooth the sheet with your hands against a firm surface.


With your hands, smooth the flat part of the sheet and straighten the elastic edge as much as possible. I admit that these sheets (which were my own teenage sheets) do not have a lot of elastic and sheets today often have elastic around the entire edge. Just straighten them as much as possible and smooth. The elastic will be hidden inside, so work at having straight outside edges.

Now fold the top part down so that the elastic edges are tucked inside the folds. You will have a long rectangle. 

Now fold one end over itself several times until you have a rectangle.



Fold up the pillowase(s) and lay them on top of the fitted sheet.



Now take your flat sheet and fold in half crosswise. Then fold in half crosswise the other way and fold in half again the same way, so that you eventually have a long rectangle. Each time you make a fold, make sure your edges are together. You will be amazed at how easy it is, if you just take a minute to do it carefully. You can just imagine me saying to you, "Slow down...what's your hurry?" ;-)





Now take your stack of fitted sheets and pillowcases and place them on the end of the flat sheet rectangle that has the unfolded edges (the other end will have been the edge you folded first). Place the fitted sheet so that its neatly fold edge is on the same side as the neatly folded edge of the flat sheet. 




Now start with the end that has the stack of sheets and fold so that you are essentially rolling the stack of sheets inside (except instead of rolling you are sort of flipping them over and over while keeping the stack firmly inside) until you have a nice neat rectangle and the sheets are swaddled tightly inside.



Now you have a nice neat little package to place on the linen closet shelf.

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Friday, June 24, 2011

25/52

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52 weeks of daily life in pictures: trials and celebrations, 
the extraordinary and mundane -- 
whatever is unique to the week. 
Join me if you like.



This week I kind of forgot to take pictures. I sort of forgot that this weekly post is supposed to be about the mundane as well as the extraordinary -- must get better about that. Well, next week is midpoint so I will try to renew my purpose and do better next week. In the meantime, I decided to post the pictures of our bathroom redo here, since I can't seem to get them posted otherwise.

Unfortunately, I don't have any "before" pics. I know that you really want to see how awful my kids' bathroom was before. ;-) Well, it really wasn't awful. But it was very different. This bathroom is a small bathroom, with a tub and a toilet and a sink -- about enough room to turn around and not much more. But the thing is, there was this huge vanity sink in it, which made even using the toilet a little cramped. I don't know why anyone would put a huge vanity in such a wee bathroom, but there it was. I didn't really use the underneath space for anything other than storing a humidifier, but I did use the sink top for my kids' electric toothbrushes, that must be plugged in to recharge. I wasn't sure where we would put those if we switched to the little tiny sink I wanted.

But early in the renovation I was forced to make a decision and I decided to have my husband tear the vanity out.  (Luckily, Home Depot has just about everything and it all worked out in the end.) I had in my mind's eye the picture of a very minimal bathroom, inspired by some pictures of German bathrooms I saw at Starry Sky Ranch (I'm sure Kim had no idea she was my inspiration for a new bathroom!). I love all that clean tile, and the teeny little sinks. After all, what more do you need than space to spit, rinse a face? I wanted space, and tile, and those were my only two priorities with the redo.

My husband ripped out the sink and the toilet and the floor and the bead board walls. (Bead board is really lovely, but not in a kids' bathroom. Kids are sloppy -- mine are -- and the splash zone around the sink had received its share of water and had swelled and was ruined.) He ripped out the flourescent light box as well, so basically all that was left was the tub and the white tile surround. I forbade him to rip out the white tile because it was in perfect condition and I thought that was a waste. Besides, once you put up a shower curtain, the tub virtually disappears.

We shopped for tile together -- just down at the Depot -- and I was a little shocked at the sticker price -- tile is not cheap. But it is forever, so we bit the bullet and spent about $250 in tile for the floor and halfway up the walls and a little bit of decorative trim which I also used the create mirror.

My husband first enlisted the help of our neighbor to patch up the ceiling and walls where he tore out the lightbox, and then wire in some "can" lights -- no fussy light fixtures here, just two large can lights. Then he prepared the floor for tile with Ditra Mat -- an expensive German product which my husband believed to be the perfect product (he watches a lot of Mike Holmes on TV). I believe that stuff cost almost as much as the tile he laid on top of it, but whatever. I stay out of it. Then he laid the floor tile (or the neighbor did), and then Doug put the tile on the walls.

As with every home improvement project, it cost more than we budgeted and took longer than we planned, but when it was all done, it was well worth the effort, and a friend told me we would have paid someone $1000 in labor alone to put the tile in, so I'm glad my husband is willing to try. He put the toilet and sink in in just a few hours and then left to me to finish with the litle extras, like the shower curtain and mirror.

The best part about having a nice new bathroom is I don't even mind cleaning it. :-)





The wee tiny little sink. If I could have I would have used a wall-mounted sink, but our pipes weren't so pretty. This was the smallest pedestal sink I could find. My husband picked out all the brushed nickel fixtures, and I think he did a nice job. As you can see, the "splash zone" is completely covered with waterproof tile!









The resolution for the plug-in toothbrushes and one of my favorite features -- a glass shelf mounted to the tile wall. It's placed just below the electric outlet and the medicine cabinet.





 I love the spot where the tile floor meets the tile wall -- I don't know why, I guess it's just clean.





My 19-year-old son went with me to pick out a shower curtain -- he was bored one day when I headed to Target to shop for accessories. I stood in the aisle and scratched my head not knowing which to pick -- I'm really not very good at that. He picked this one and I didn't have the heart to tell him it wasn't what I had in mind (and I wasn't even sure what I did have in mind). After we got it home and hung it, I realized it was perfect. He did a great job.





The mirror that I tiled (process seen here). It was very heavy when I finished and so Doug had to use heavy duty mirror brackets to hang it -- he used the Dremel drill to notch out a channel in the side of the tiles to fit the bracket in. It was the last thing done in the bathroom. Voila!





Below you'll find a linky list because so many lovely women decided to join me in my 52 Weeks project. There are no rules (except the two below) -- if you want to start your 52 Weeks this week, go for it! I will keep the links up until next Wednesday, so you have almost a week to do it.



(1) Make sure you copy and paste the URL of your 52 Weeks blog post ( and not your main blog URL). You could also use of Flickr photo page if that's how you do things.
(2) Include a link back here in your blog post or flickr photo page.






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Thursday, April 28, 2011

Spring Cleaning, Part III

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This is the last installment of the Spring Cleaning series -- The Kitchen. I'm not going to tell you how to clean the closets, the basement, the garage or any other room you might have in your house. I'm afraid you're on your own there. By now you should basically have the concept of cleaning around the room and then cleaning what's in the room, right?

The kitchen is a little different from the bedrooms (yes, like no beds) and the bath (like no toilet), mostly in that kitchen dirt is very different from the dust in the bedroom and living room and hair spray overspray and soap scum in the bath. Kitchen dirt is tough. If you cook (hey, everybody doesn't) you have a greasy film built up on the ceiling, the walls, the cabinets. It's not easy.You also have cabinets and drawers which need to be cleaned out (don't even consider skipping them -- they need it!). Spring cleaning the kitchen is a big job, so I recommend you not clean anything else on the same day. Take your time, pace yourself, and you'll get it done.

As with the other rooms, gather your supplies: lots of clean, dry cotton rags (old dish towels work well here), ammonia and white vinegar or another cleaner of your choice, some cleanser (like Ajax or Comet, or if you don't like harsh cleaner -- baking soda), a bottle of furniture polish like Liquid Gold (if you have wood cabinets), the broom with the t-shirt wrap (here), sponges with scrubby sides, a toothbrush, a scrub brush, the sweeper with attachments, a couple of empty laundry baskets or boxes, a trash bag. Also you'll need a couple of fresh lemons or about a cup of bottled lemon juice (I really prefer the fresh lemon).








First, you are to put everything that is sitting out away. If there are items in your kitchen that don't belong there, put them in a box or empty laundry basket to deliver at their respective place later -- don't leave the kitchen. If anything is left sitting out, put it in an empty box or in the middle of the kitchen table -- just get it off the counters/refrigerator/stove.

Now you are going to start at the window just as you did in the bedrooms, living room, and bathroom. The kitchen window treatments, like in the bathroom, need to be cleaned at least twice a year, so go ahead and take them down. If they are washable, take them to the washer and put them in. If they are "dry clean only," shake them outdoors, fold them and put them in the car for the next trip to the dry cleaner. If you have blinds, read this, and do it. Clean the window inside and out with ammonia or vinegar water. Clean the sill, giving it a good scrub to remove any greasy film. If you have caulk around the sill (as with any caulk in the kitchen) determine if it needs to be replaced. If it's dry, cracked, or moldy, make a note to come back and replace it later (or give that task to your honey.) Wash the window frame all the way around.







Now move to the ceiling. Like you did with the bedroom walls, use your broom with the t-shirt to sweep the corners of the ceilings and walls to remove cobwebs and gathered dust. Take it all around the perimeter of the room getting above any upper cabinets.  Push hard -- the dust on the ceiling of the kitchen is a greasy dust and it won't brush off with a quick swipe. If possible -- if you have a high ladder and you can safely get up on it -- dust the tops of your upper cabinets. Mine are attached to the soffit above, but many people have open space above the cabinets and it gets mightily dusty up there. It helps to have someone spot you you when you do this (but, if you are stubborn, like me, you'll do it without). Just don't fall. Please.

Now, again, if you can get up on a ladder, clean your light fixture or fixtures (turn it off and let it cool first). If you are at all shaky on the ladder wait until you have a spotter. Use vinegar water or ammonia water solution and wipe it all down and dry it. Don't forget to dust the bulbs as well. If your shades are removable glass I find that the dishwasher does a grand job of cleaning them. Just run them on a gentle cycle.

Now we are going to move down to the inside of the upper cabinets. Starting in a corner, you are going to do this with each cabinet, moving around the room until you get back where you started: remove the items on the top shelf to a counter below; wipe the shelf with ammonia or vinegar water, and then dry it with a clean, dry rag; replace to the shelf the items you want to keep -- this is a good time to be selective. If you haven't used it in a year, toss it or give it away. It's helpful to have an extra empty box for giveaway stuff. Move to the next shelf doing the same thing until you are finished with that cabinet.



I don't have a lot of wall space in my kitchen so I don't have a lot of walls to scrub, but if you do, get them in between upper cabinets with your ammonia water and some cleanser if necessary. Scrub ceiling to floor if you think they need it.

Keep moving, changing your cleaning water as necessary. You'll be at this a while, but keep plugging away. Stop for a snack if you need some energy, and do what you must to keep the kids from killing each other. Maybe you could feed them, too. ;-)

After you have cleaned out all of the upper cabinets and everything is either put back or placed in the trash or giveaway box, make a clean bucket of ammonia water and wash the outside of the cabinets, and the handles, and dry them. You might have to scrub extra hard around the pull, but don't use anything scratchy like a scrub pad. You could use a spot of cleanser or baking soda for some light abrasion. If you have stained wood cabinets, take a clean, dry rag and polish the outsides of the cabinets with good furniture polish (my mother always used Liquid Gold, so to me, it's the best).

Now move to the appliances. Clean the top of the stove using as harsh an abrasive as the stove will tolerate -- don't scratch it. Hopefully you know what gets your stovetop clean by now. If you have grates, you might put them in the dishwasher for a run. If your grates are chipped, however, don't do that or you'll end up with rust spots. Some people take their stove grates outdoors to give them a good scrub. Take the oven racks out while you're at it if that's the method you use. If you have an self-cleaning oven, you can do that on another day when you're not going to be in the kitchen. They generate a lot of heat and that's one thing you don't need today. If you don't have a self-cleaning oven, you're on your own here (I have always had a self-cleaner). I read this guide at Martha Stewart Living -- maybe it will help. Don't forget the storage drawer in the bottom if you have one. And if you have a strong guy around, pull the stove out and sweep underneath and behind (if you have a gas stove, be careful of the gas connection when you pull it out and push it back). If you pull it out, wash the sides of the stove as well as the sides of the cabinets next door-- there are always little spills between the cabinet and stove that need a good scrubbing with cleanser.








Now clean the microwave. Clean the outside with some ammonia water and a good rough rag. Dry the glass. Then move to the inside. Fill a large glass measuring cup with about half a cup of water and then squeeze the juice of a lemon in it. Place the lemon in the water as well. Place it in the microwave and set it to about 3 minutes on High. After it has finished running, check to see if the walls of the microwave are moist. If they are not, set it for another two minutes or so. Then, with the door closed, leave it sit while you do something else.  After about 15 minutes go back and wipe the microwave out. The lemon water should have loosened most of the stuff (you should clean your micro more often if there is much left) and you should be able to wipe it out quickly and easily. And it smells fresh, doesn't it?

Now move to the refrigerator. First, wash the outside with a clean batch of ammonia water. If you have stuff on the front with magnets, take it all off and sift through the stuff while you sit with a cup of tea (see, I'm not ruthless). After the front, top, and sides of the fridge have been washed, you really should use the sweeper to vacuum off the back and underneath. If moving the fridge might damage the floor, don't move it alone. If you have vinyl or hardwood floor, place a large piece of cardboard in front of the fridge (or at the very least some heavy brown paper) and gently roll the fridge onto the paper or cardboard. If you have a thin sheet of wood, that works too. If you have a very skinny attachment to your sweeper, push it under the fridge as far as it will go and suction the dust. Your fridge will operate better if you occasionally clean under and behind, so try not to neglect it.






If you have the kind of fridge that needs to be manually defrosted you're on your own here. I saw my grandma do that once when I was young, but I'm pretty sure even her fridge now self defrosts. For everyone with a self defrosting fridge, start inside on the top shelf. Remove everything to a counter or box (throwing out anything that you don't want anymore) and wipe the shelf and the sides with clean vinegar water. Dry the shelf and put back the items that belong there. Move to the next shelf all the way down to the fruit and vegetable bins. Take them out and clean them in the sink if you can.

Then move to the freezer and do the same thing, tossing anything you don't want or you can't verify how long it's been in there. When you are finished put everything back and grab a spoonful of ice cream if you must (just the part that got soft while it was sitting out). If your refrigerator has a drain pan underneath, pull it out and clean it -- outdoors with a hose if possible. Dry it and replace it.

Now to the dishwasher. I've never done much beyond cleaning the outside and around the edges, but I have run a short cycle with a cup of bleach inside the bottom of the tub, and I have followed that up with a short cycle of lemon juice in the bottom. The bleach will kill any bacteria and the lemon juice will help get rid of any deposits.

Any other appliances? Well, not in my kitchen. You might pour a cup of ice down the disposal and squeeze in half a lemon. Turn it on and run the hot water for a minute. Then turn it off and run the hot water for another couple minutes. That should clean out the inside and disinfect. If it's stinky down there, pour in a half cup of bleach and let it sit for 15 to 20 minutes. Then add more ice and do it again, minus the lemon juice.

Now, start on the drawers. Remove everything and go through the same steps you did when you cleaned the upper cabinets, throwing away or giving away what you don't use. Wipe out the drawer using a clean bucket of ammonia water (and by now you should be using some clean rags), dry it and replace the items you'll keep.

Now do the bottom cabinets -- same process as the upper cabinets except you can sit on the floor this time. When you are finished with the inside, scrub the drawer fronts and the exterior of the cabinets, dry them and if you have stained wood, polish them.





Now I go back up to the counter tops. You were using them while you cleaned the drawers and the lower cabinets, so wipe off any debris and then give them a good scrubbing with cleanser. Get the corners with the toothbrush and around the faucet at the sink. Do the back splash while you're at it. If you don't normally clean the sink with bleach (a la Fly Lady) do that now. Fill the sink (plug it first) with hot water and add a couple glugs of bleach. Let it sit as long as you can while you are cleaning something else or taking a break. Up to an hour but at least 15 minutes. Scrub any leftover marks in the sink and rinse all the counter tops well.

The floor is the last thing to clean (if you need to clean your pantry I suggest you do that another day). Remove any rugs to be washed thoroughly. Then sweep -- using the vacuum attachment to get the corners well. Then (and please forgive me, but you absolutely can do this twice a  year, if you don't do every week) get down on your hands and knees (use a folded towel for padding if you need it) and, using some clean vinegar water, your scrub brush and a rag, scrub and the wipe from one corner to the door. Get the baseboards good while you're down there and any walls that are low (like under a large window). If you have wood floors, you'll have to use the manufacturer's recommendations for cleaning. The scrub brush method works for tile, linoleum, engineered wood (laminate), and vinyl. If you have a floor with wax on it (there are still a few out there) you might want to schedule another day to remove the wax and reapply.

I apologize about any typos and/or grammatical errors in this post. I really rushed to get it done. I'm tired of spring cleaning, how 'bout you?



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"The secret of getting ahead is getting started. The secret of getting started is breaking your complex overwhelming tasks into small manageable tasks, and then starting on the first one.” ~~ Mark Twain
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Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Spring Cleaning, Part II

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Part I
Part III


The Bathroom

Spring Cleaning the bath is really not very different from cleaning any room, with just a few additions, and, of course, you don't have furniture in the bath. At least I don't. I can barely fit a person in my baths, much less furniture. If you have baths big enough for furniture you probably aren't cleaning your own. That's all I can say about that.

As with the bedroom, gather your supplies: ammonia or vinegar, a bucket, you might want some specific cleaning products for the sink and tub in your bath, a toilet brush, a broom with a t-shirt wrapped over the bristles (remember it here in Part I?), a sweeper with attachments, clean rags, a scrub brush, an old toothbrush (or if you're sore at your husband, just use his -- kidding...totally kidding), an empty box or laundry basket, a trash bag, a bottle of bleach or a bleach gel pen, if you possibly have mold in the bath.

If you have items sitting on your sink or toilet, or in the shower, first put away anything that should not be sitting out. Then remove the items that should sit out to an empty box or laundry basket for the time being.  Anything that does not belong in this room should be placed in a basket or box to be put away later. Don't leave the room to put things away or you'll lose focus.

If you use an iPod, plug in some good music. I don't have an iPod, but I'm on an Il Divo kick and I enjoy listening to them while I'm busy cleaning.





Start your cleaning at the window, if you are lucky enough to have a window in the bath -- I don't have one in any of my baths. Take down any window treatments and take them to the washer if they are washable. If they are dry clean only, shake them outdoors and then fold them and place them in the cargo hold of your car for the next trip to the dry cleaner. The window treatments in the bathroom definitely need to be cleaned more often than once a year (unlike the bedroom) -- at least twice, and more if your bath gets a lot of traffic (and showers). If you have blinds, read this, and do it. Clean the window inside and out. Clean the sill -- use the bleach and the scrub brush if necessary to remove any mold. If you have caulk around the sill (as with any caulk in the bathroom) determine if it needs to be replaced. If it's dry, cracked, or moldy, make a note to come back and replace it later (or give that task to your honey.) A bleach gel pen is handy for cleaning spots of mold on caulk, but if you have quite a bit of mold you absolutely should remove the caulk. Mold is very unhealthy and you should get rid of it (the mold) as soon as you notice it. If you are lucky enough to have a window, and it's nice outdoors, leave it open while you clean for some fresh air.

If you have bath rugs and/or toilet seat covers gather them up and wash (or replace) them as well. Use bleach in your wash water if those items can handle it.






a calendar page matted and framed (an old frame)


Next move onto the the ceiling and walls. Like you did with the bedroom walls, use your broom with the t-shirt to sweep the corners of the ceilings and walls to remove cobwebs and gathered dust. Take it all around the perimeter of the room. If you have an exhaust fan, take a good look (with a flashlight if necessary) to see if there is dust built up behind the cover. Have your dear, sweet husband remove it if it's dusty and clean it. It's not removing the air from the room very well if it's clogged with dust. And speaking of the exhaust, my dear TV friend Holmes says you should run your exhaust for 30 minutes during and after a shower. That may seem excessive, but if you have mold anywhere in your bath, you might want to listen to him.

Now, make a bucket of warm ammonia or white vinegar water and get a clean rag (I think both ammonia and vinegar are good for cleaning the bath, or you can use Mr. Clean or Lysol cleaner. Some people don't like the smell of ammonia, and if that's the case pick something else.). With a wrung-out rag, wash the surface of the door frame(s) and the door(s). If you have paneled doors, they likely have accumulated dust on the "ledges." Rinse your rag as necessary to keep it clean. Clean the door frame and door inside and out, and wipe the door knobs. If you have painted wood you won't need to dry the wood, but if you have stained wood, you should.


A simple peg for each little person is helpful for cutting back on dirty towels and towels on the floor.


The walls in the bathroom tend to get pretty yucky, especially if you use hairspray. Wash the walls from top to bottom, using a chair or step ladder, making your way around the perimeter of the room, changing your water as necessary to keep it fairly clean. No need to rinse the walls, but you might need to use a rough rag in spots -- especially if you have hairspray over spray. Wipe any wall hangings and clean the glass of any picture frames.

Now get on a ladder or chair and clean your light fixture with a wet rag. You may need to turn it off for five minutes to let it cool down. Wipe the bulbs as well -- they get dusty too.

Now tackle the medicine chest. Remove everything to either the trash bag or the empty box/laundry basket. Wipe the shelves out, the door, the handle. Replace those items that should be in the medicine chest. Prescription drugs should really be stored in a cool dry place, so the bathroom is less than ideal (nor should they be where children might get them). I keep a small basket up on a shelf in the master closet (adjacent to the bath) for prescription drugs. Thus, they are not where the children could reach them, nor are they in a warm, damp spot.









Move on to the vanity or sink. They are many configurations of sinks, some have vanities, some don't. Some are made from porcelain, some marble, some have tile tops, some have Formica. I can't possibly imagine every material and configuration, so do what you need to do for your sink top. Using the recommended cleaner (vinegar should be good on all materials), clean the sink top and the faucet. Clean around the faucet. If you have caulk here, make a note as to whether it should be replaced. Get the old toothbrush out and clean around the faucet thoroughly -- this is a good place for yucky germs to multiply. Also clean around the perimeter of the sink, cleaning any caulk thoroughly, wiping off any ledges.

If you have drawers, remove all the items in the drawer, throwing out anything the is old or unneeded, and place things in a box that you'll put back. Using the sweeper, suck out any debris and hair from the drawers one at a time. Then wipe them clean with a rag from your cleaning bucket. Do the cabinets in the same way. Replace the items that go in the drawers or cabinets. Wipe the outsides of the cabinets, getting the dust out of the corners of the door panels, or wiping off the plumbing underneath if it's exposed. If you have wood cabinets, use some furniture polish to shine them up and protect the wood.








Move on to the toilet. Using your toothbrush, clean around the fasteners on the seat and around the base of the toilet. Use the toothbrush around the base if it needs it. Changing your water as necessary, wipe the toilet and seat down, and clean the bowl (use a toilet brush). This is not much different than your weekly cleaning, maybe a little more thorough.

Clean the shower/tub like you would during the week, except take note if the caulk needs replaced, or touch up with bleach if you have a little bit of mold. Use the toothbrush on the faucet, getting around the edges, and the caulk. Scrub the walls of the shower/tub with a scrub brush and use something with bubbles if it helps to see where you have washed (like scrubbing bubbles cleaner). If you have doors on your shower/tub clean them with ammonia/vinegar water and scrub them extra hard. Clean the chrome around the doors, wiping it dry with a clean rag. Wipe the top of the frame as well. If you have a curtain, take it down and wash it. If you have a plastic liner, it probably could stand to be replaced -- you can pick one up at the grocery store for a few bucks.



A Christmas card matted and framed (new frame -- Target ) -- who says you need expensive art? It's a famous painting printed on a card.




When you are finished with the tub/shower, and if there is nothing else in the bathroom to clean (no furniture, or storage pieces) sweep the floor, first with the vacuum and then with the attachments all around the edges. Then make a clean bucket of cleaning water and, using a rag, wipe the baseboards and wash the floor, from one corner across the room, to the door.



“Do you know what you call those who use towels and never wash them, eat meals and never do the dishes, sit in rooms they never clean, and are entertained till they drop? If you have just answered, "A house guest," you're wrong because I have just described my kids.” ~~ Erma Bombeck
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