Tuesday, April 26, 2011

HOUSEKEEPING WITH FLAIR

Picture Credit:  MY HOME IDEAS
AHHHH....the DAILY task of keeping house.  Are you up for this task each day?  Do you dread the "dailiness" of it....making beds, loading/unloading the dishwasher, the seemingly unending piles of laundry....will it EVER end??  I want to ENCOURAGE you as you read this.....you CAN maintain a positive and upbeat attitude about the chore of keeping house.  I truly believe it is a form of ART!  


I recently read this great article in THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS.   Very insightful! 

Old-fashioned housekeeping tips from Dallas-Fort Worth grandmothers








Younger generations seem to have missed out on some of the lessons that their grandmothers knew so well. Those everyday, practical skills - sewing a missing button on a cuff, roasting a chicken, getting a garden to grow - can help stretch today's household budgets as well.
Author Erin Bried got tired of not knowing these skills, so she went straight to the experts: grandmothers. She cataloged household tips and practical advice from 10 grandmothers across the U.S. in How to Sew a Button: And Other Nifty Things Your Grandmother Knew (Ballantine Books, $15).
We wondered what lessons North Texas grandmothers had to share. Here are their tips for making a house a home, and a home that can stick to a budget.
Lila Brooks, 81, of South Dallas
Get a routine and stick to it: In Brooks' home, Saturday was cleaning day - the bed linens were changed; the laundry was washed, ironed and ready to go for the next week; the floors were scrubbed; windows were washed; and all the work was done before the family went out to have fun. They didn't have to worry about heavy-duty chores for another week.
Get familiar with your sewing kit: Save your clothes and extend their lives by knowing how to patch jeans, sew on buttons and repair busted zippers.
Forget about dilly-dallying: Get up and get busy. "Get your house straightened right away. Start off by making your bed first thing," Brooks says.
Expect the unexpected: Brooks is always ready for whoever might drop by, something she learned from her own grandmother. The house is kept tidy so when guests pop in, there's no need to scurry around, straightening the house.
Frances Beckwith, 92, of Fort Worth
Above all else, have some respect: Whether it's for people or for things, treat things properly.
Love your linens: "It's a shame that today people don't use linens the way they used to." Dress a table before having company to a dinner or party, Beckwith says. Retire place mats and cloths when years of use and laundering start to show.
Quality counts: Save to buy the nicest pieces of furniture you can afford, then care for them. Keep furniture dusted and protected from sharp-edged decorations.
Good day, sunshine: Hang your clothes to dry on a clothesline, "so they'll smell sweet like the sunshine."
Use the good stuff: If you've got china, use it when entertaining. Paper is almost never OK in Beckwith's book.
Bea Kassees, 79, of East Dallas
Don't be afraid to accept help: Kassees' mother-in-law lived with her when her children where young. "She loved to cook, and I loved to let her cook." Kassees appreciated the help as well as the skills she learned from her husband's mother. To this day, her mother-in-law's Middle Eastern recipes are the ones her grandchildren request most often.
Ground hamburger is your friend: Kassees says to help her grocery dollar go further, she came up with "10,000 ways of cooking hamburger."
Utilize the oil of the gods: Kassees used olive oil to help ward off everything from stomach trouble to complexion issues. She's been known to apply it directly to super dry skin to provide relief.
Be a teacher: Parents need to get their children started with chores early. Teach them skills as you're doing the tasks. Let kids help make the beds, wash the dishes, put away the laundry. There's no need to wait until they're a certain age; teach them bit by bit. Before you know it, they'll be better than their teacher.
Norma Field, 86, of North Dallas
Eat leftovers: Don't let foods go to waste. If your husband doesn't like them, train him to by serving them until he eats them.
Simple is best: Keep clutter and knickknacks to a minimum; there's less to clean around that way.
Jump into new challenges: When she got married at 29, Field had never cooked a meal in her life. That didn't stop her from learning.
Don't try to do it all yourself: Field's husband helped around the house. They split the household chores - he cleaned the bathrooms, she did the cooking - and took a team approach to housekeeping and child-rearing.
A fresh start: Always start the day by making your bed, and never go to bed with dirty dishes in the sink.
How to Sew a Button
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HERE ARE SEVERAL OF MY CURRENT FAVORITE HOUSE CLEANING PRODUCTS.  THESE ITEMS TRULY HELP TO KEEP MY HOME IN ORDER.  *MOST IMPORTANT, THESE PRODUCTS CUT GERMS AND, WITH SMALL CHILDREN IN THE HOME, I GREATLY VALUE THIS! 


Picture from:  My Home Ideas.  THIS is the BEST (hands down!) stain fighter that there is!  Get some TODAY!
DRUGSTORE.COM.  I store a bottle of this WONDERFUL cleaner in each bathroom.  I use it OFTEN!  Cuts germs and, smells DIVINE.  I pour approx. 1 1/2 cups directly in to the toilet and, allow it to sit and CLEAN on its own for 10 minutes. Next, I don rubber gloves, grab a sponge and wipe out the toilet , then flush.  
An organic and highly effective fabric softener.  DRUGSTORE.COM

I CANNOT live without this AMAZING product in our home!  I buy this in BULK at www.costco.com.  My dear Mom-In-Law has been teaching pre-schoolers for over 20 years and, she INSISTS that this product is the reason the flu rate in her school is VERY low!!!  BUY some today and spray your toilets on a DAILY basis! 
My secret to getting "excited" about cleaning house?  First thing, I light a yummy smelling candle.  Works like a charm to get me going!  This wonderful candle by FEBREZE is called "GREEN TEA CITRUS".  Available at DRUGSTORE.COM
ARE THESE RUBBER GLOVES CUTE , OR WHAT??  DON THESE GLOVES AND, CLEAN AWAY!  Available from APRON QUEEN on ETSY.  Only $12.95 each and, wouldn't these make an ADORABLE gift?? 
LOOK at this darling apron!  To order:  APRON QUEEN  on ETSY.  $22.95.  CUTE!!!
FLAIR CLEANING TIPS FOR A TIDY HOUSE: EVERY DAY
  • MAKE THE BEDS FIRST THING EVERY DAY.  A MADE-UP BED MAKES THE ROOM AUTOMATICALLY LOOK 75% MORE STRAIGHT. 
  • DO LAUNDRY EVERY SINGLE DAY, IF NOT SEVERAL TIMES EACH DAY- ALLOWING THE LAUNDRY TO STACK UP IS VERY OVERWHELMING.  WASH EACH DAY AND, THE PILE WILL NOT SEEM AS DAUNTING.
  • DISINFECT TOILETS EVERY SINGLE DAY.  THIS HABIT WILL CUT DOWN ON GERMS AND, YOU WILL FEEL A LITTLE MORE TIDY WITH A SPARKLING TOILET BOWL EACH DAY.  * FLAIR TIP: STORE A BOTTLE OF CLOROX CLEAN-UP IN EACH BATHROOM AND, ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS GRAB, SPRAY AND CLEAN....QUICK AND EASY!
  • ADOPT THE ATTITUDE THAT KEEPING HOUSE IS VERY MUCH A DAILY TASK.  CHOOSE TO BE HAPPY AS YOU CLEAN UP AND, TREAT YOURSELF TO A CUP OF COFFEE OR HOT TEA AFTER YOUR ARE FINISHED.
  • SORT THE MAIL RIGHT WHEN YOU TAKE IT OUT OF THE MAIL BOX. THROW OUT JUNK MAIL, RESPOND TO AN INVITATION AND FILE THE BILLS.  PRACTICE THIS EVERY DAY AND, I PROMISE, YOU WILL NOT HAVE A STACK OF MAIL 'LOOKING' YOU IN THE FACE.
  • EMPTY TRASH CANS EVERY SINGLE DAY.  I EMPTY TRASH CANS IN THE BATH ROOM AND UNDER THE KITCHEN SINK ON A DAILY BASIS.  LOOKING AT AN EMPTY TRASH CAN MAKES ME SMILE!  
  • LOAD THE DISH WASHER EACH NIGHT BEFORE YOU GET IN BED AND, PUSH 'START'.  THERE IS NOTHING LIKE WAKING UP TO CLEAN DISHES.
  • PREPARE THE COFFEE MAKER THE NIGHT BEFORE.  LOAD THE FILTER, THE COFFEE AND, SET OUT THE CUPS.  FIRST THING IN THE MORNING, ALL YOU NEED TO DO IS PRESS "START" AND, YOUR CUP OF HOT COFFEE IS MINUTES AWAY!  
YOUR TIDY HOUSE IS RIGHT AROUND THE CORNER!  CLEAN YOUR HOUSE WITH FLAIR, EACH AND EVERY DAY.  YOU WILL TRULY FEEL SATISFIED AND, YOU WILL DEVELOP GOOD HABITS TO KEEPING AN ORDERLY AND PEACEFUL HOUSE. 

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Just got this book. http://www.amazon.com/Hip-Girls-Guide-Homemaking-Self-Sufficiency/dp/0062014706/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1303874509&sr=8-1

I will let you know how it is!!!

Elizabeth said...

Great post!

I don't just use the clorox clean-up for baths. I spray it on spots on my whites before I put them in the laundry. It takes stains out perfectly! (Just don't overspray onto any colors on the garment.)