Showing posts with label soap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soap. Show all posts

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Stain, stain go away - come on back another, wait - Never??

I don't get how Martha Stewart does it. Or did it before she was famous (and had servants to do her work).

How the hell do you get rid of an old SET IN STAIN!

I've read the tips, I've tried the tips.  The tips don't work half the time.

I have kids (and a husband) therefore I have stains on clothes.....and as such, many are thrown out when i have given up trying to get the stain out.

So....along comes my friend Mr. Google and we look for a homemade product that just might work.

I found a recipe, tried it, and O. M. G.  It works.  The photos don't acutally do the product as much justice as it deserves....but it works.  My husband has this beautiful stark white Canada hat I purchased for him during the 2010 winter olympics.  Why I decided white would be a good colour for my gets everything covered in stains husband, I will never know.

His hat was gross.  The sweat-dirt stains were all over it and I banished the hat to a spot where he couldn't FIND it so that I wouldn't be embarrassed if he tried to wear it out in public.  I had already tried throwing it in the wash to no avail.

So.  I pulled it out (hey honey I "found" your hat LOL!!).

Spray on the homemade stain remover.  Wait 10 minutes.  Rinse off.

Holy white hat.

The photos below are from the first time I did it.  I should have taken more after I went through the process a second time and actually scrubbed the hat.....but I can't find the hat anymore.  Pretty sure that hubby has hidden it so I can't get my hands on it again.  haha.  It's amazing - it looks brand new.



Since the hat, I have used it on nearly every set it and fresh stain that comes up.  It's been great.  New stains come out perfectly and as for the old set in ones...well....I took a pile of 20 pairs of kids underwear (my daughter had 'bathroom issues') that I was about to pitch.  I sprayed each and every one, threw them in the wash and crossed my fingers.  Out of 20, I  completely saved 8 pairs.  Not a hint of any stain left anymore.  The remaining 12 were better but not completely stain free.  And these stains were old, set and had many bleach/commercial stain removers applied with no success.  I've also recently used it on a cat barf stain in the basement.  Took it out completely in less than 2 minutes.

The commercial stuff I had been using was either the Clorox 2 Laundry Stain Remover ($3.47 for 650ml) or OxyClean Gel Stick Pre-Treater ($3.99 for 6.5 oz)

Here is how I did it and what it cost.

Laundry Stain Remover


Ingredients

·      1 cup dawn dishwashing liquid
·      2 cups Hydrogen peroxide

Directions


1.     mix toget

Yield

·     750ml

Cost

·      Dawn dishwashing liquid ($2.49/750ml) = $0.83/1 cup
·      Hydrogen Peroxide ($1.97/1 L) = $0.985/2 cups
·      Total - $1.81

Friday, September 7, 2012

I have kids, therefore I have fingerprints.....

On glass.

On mirrors.

Doorjambs, walls, tables, fridge, counters.

Seriously?  I'm not sure what they get on their fingers that make this tiny little smuge spots on E-V-E-R-Y-T-H-I-N-G.  I have a large mirror in our family room that I swear will never be clean.  Ever.

Of course....I was the braniac who just HAD to have the glass table top kitchen table.  Stupid.

Windex?  I think they make 4 different kinds of Windex, maybe more, and I've tried every one of them.  I still can't get mirrors to that no-streaks-or-haze state.  And it drives me NUTS!

So.  New search.  There appear to be 2 main recipies of homemade glass cleaner out there.  One includes ammonia, one has no ammonia but has cornstarch.  Based on the fact that I had cornstarch in the house and didn't have ammonia I chose that one. (I also hate the smell of ammonia - I do the cleaning around here, I'm not smelling that on everything!!)

Super easy to make.  And it works.  For the first time I had absolutely clean, streak and haze free glass!.

The cost difference is great.  Especially when I noticed that the price tag was still on the bottle of Windex on my counter.  $5.99.  OUCH! I cringed when I saw that.  Obviously NOT a great 'shopping for the lowest price' moment.

For the sake of my ego, sanity, fairness, we will pretend that the bottle of Windex Original that I have actually cost the current price (at Walmart) of $2.93.  And yes, I know that there is a slight difference between the bottle sizes but really, even if you double the cost of the homemade stuff, it's still ridiculously cheaper.

Windex - $2.93/765ml 
Homemade - $0.48/ 750ml

SAVINGS OF $2.45/bottle 

Here is how I did it and what it cost.


Glass Cleaner

Ingredients

·      ½ cup rubbing alcohol
·      ½ cup white vinegar
·      2 TBSP cornstarch
·      2 cups warm water

Directions

1.     combine everything in a spray bottle and shake.

Yield

·      750ml

Cost

·       Vinegar ($1.49/4 litres) = $0.04/ ½ cup
·      Rubbing Alcohol ($2.87/1 litre) = $0.36/ ½ cup
·      Cornstarch ($1.49/454g) = $0.08/2 TBSP (24g)

Notes:

·      Shake it before using.  The cornstarch settles at the bottom of the bottle and may plug the sprayer.  Give it a good shake before cleaning your windows and that problem is gone.

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Snotty Body Wash.

I was on a roll.

Laundry Soap, Fabric Softener, Tub and Shower cleaner.

I was confident.  Overconfident.

My mistake.

Last week, I decided that since my current bottle of body wash was only 3 showers away from oblivion, I should try and make some.  WOW.  I was an idiot.

I did my usual 'thing'.  Read blogs until I was seeing spots (yeah, I know what you are thinking - I have WAY to much time on my hands).  Since my current 'job' is a) healing my back b) getting better and c) physio - I'm pretty much a bum.  Nevertheless - I kept reading and reading and finally found what I thought would be a perfect recipe.  Everything I needed I already had on hand and according to the particular website I obtained most of my information from, this would be PERFECT!

I was excited!

I dived into the recipe.  Everything ran smoothly.  It smelled wonderful!!  I let the mixture cool overnight.

In the morning, eager to try out my new soap, I took the lid of the bucket and low and behold....

I had snot.

Kinda gross.  ok.  REALLY gross.  I mixed it with the immersion blender hoping against hope that the snotty texture would go away.

Yeah - no.  It didn't.

Ok (i thought to myself).  There are concessions to be made here.  This IS a homemade product.  This says it's supposed to work (the warning being that it may be a touch slimy and won't foam much).  Ok. I'll try it.

Shower #1.  The snot wouldn't stay on the bath poof.  I made do.  I was clean.  I smelled good.
Shower #2.  Nope, not getting used to this.  Still clean, still nice smelling.  I'll live with it.
Shower #3.  NO FRIGGIN WAY AM I DOING THIS AGAIN!!!!  I simply can't stand this snotty, slimy, no foaming shower body wash stuff.  SCREW IT.

I swallowed my bruised ego.  I swallowed the $2.00 it cost to make 4 litres of this crap.

I went back to the internet.  I think the actual search I put in good was "body wash that isn't snotty".

I read some more.  I found what the author described as the perfect body wash.  TA DA!!  I could hear angels singing....ok maybe no angels, but I was excited however skeptical after my first disaster.

During my next trip to the store, I picked up some beautiful Dove Shea Butter soap.  I've secretly always been a dove girl but it's so expensive for the body wash so I would usually pick up whatever was decent, smelled nice and was on sale.  My last bottle was a Nivea soap. ( LOVE Nivea products!)

Ok.  Round 2.

Did the 'microwave the soap instead of grating it on a cheese grater' method.  Nope - don't like that - the soap came out as a hot blob of goo and immediately went hard before I got it out of the measuring cup and into the water.  In the 3 minutes it took to microwave the 3 bars of soap, I could have had them grated and in the hot water already boiling.

Hot water - check.  Soap in hot water - check.  Standing by hot stove to stir the soap (ughh) - check.

I'm sure it took 10 minutes to melt the soap but I'm convinced it was only because the soap was a big lump after coming out of the microwave.

After everything was melted, I poured the soap through a strainer to make sure I hadn't missed any lumps of soap (I hadn't).  I sent a text to my hubby saying there was soap on the counter and not to go trying to taste it.  (ok, so my hubby has this annoying habit of getting his fingers into anything I'm baking/cooking/making whatever - to taste it.....figured it looked like icing so he might just try it)

On second thought - next time I'm not letting him know >>evil grin<<

I let it cool overnight.  Not expecting much in the morning, I took a look at the white mess in the bowl and TADA!!  It was awesome!!  A quick stir with the immersion blender and the addition of about 1/2 a cup of water (I thought it was a little thick) and it was SILKY, SMOOTH, FRAGRANT, BEAUTIFUL BODY WASH!!

I poured it into my empty Nivea bottle and used it that day.  It was great.  It felt awesome against my skin, lathered like a 'normal' body wash and left my skin clean and soft.  AMAZING!  Another great 'plus' to this is that it doubles as a hand soap as well.

I was SOLD!

My son tried it tonight....he usually uses the bar of Irish Spring my husband has in the shower - and he always complains that it dries out his skin.   Well, rave reviews from him tonight!  He loved it.

When I made this up, I used the 500ml jars I had.  The thought to that being that when it was used as a hand soap, all I needed to do was take off the jar top and put on the jar top from the hand soap containers I already had.  2 birds with one stone! One batch, two uses...like this...



The cost difference is pretty good.  The store bought stuff I was using was Nivea Water Lily.  I picked it up for $4.49.  The bottle is 16.9oz.  The homemade stuff makes 3 times as much as the store bought.  

Nivea - $4.49/16.9oz - $0.26/oz
Homemade - $3.75/3 bars Dove Shea Butter Soap, 50.7oz - $0.07/oz.

SAVINGS OF $0.19/oz!  I find that I use slightly less of the homemade stuff because it's pretty thick and sudsy.  

Here is how I did it and what it cost.



Body Wash and Hand Soap

Ingredients
·      
3  3 bars of soap
·      6 cups of water

Directions

1.     Put water into a pan on the stove and bring to a boil, then turn down to medium heat.
2.     Grate the soap, add the grated soap to pot of water.
3.     Continue stirring occasionally over medium heat until all the soap is dissolved.
4.     When completely dissolved…transfer to a glass jar or bowl and allow to cool, then pour into a plastic bottle for shower use!
5.     It will thicken as it cools and will continue to thicken for about 24 hours.
6.     If it gets TOO thick…simply add some water until it’s the desired consistency.

Yield

·      1.5 litres (50.7oz)

Cost

·      Dove bars ($1.25 each) x 3 = $3.75


Edited to add:

Yesterday I tried this recipe with Oil of Olay Shea Butter Soap, I added a 1/2 cup extra water to it and it also turned out very nice.  The cost worked out to: $3.25/batch.  It's nice but I like the Dove one better....but then again, I'm a Dove girl.  :)

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Showers and Baths and Toilets, oh my!


I had a revelation.  This DIY cleaner thing may be the way to go.  I went through my cabinets/cleaning products and thought how sad it was that we were spending so much money on this stuff when there were equivalent products we could MAKE at a fraction of the cost.

Who doesn't love saving money?

I have a confession to make.  I'm a horse-a-holic.  There.  I've said it.  WHEW!  I've had horses since I was 12 years old (actually, I still have THE horse I got when I was 12 years old - he's 25 now).  My horses suck the cash out of our pockets....save money, not as much cash sucked out.....well, it won't *feel* as if as much is getting sucked out. 


See?  He's pretty cute.

Not to be outdone - here's one of my girl...


I found a recipe online that sounded to be good.  But it came with a warning.  It smelled S-T-R-O-N-G.  Yeah, they were not lying.  The first time I used it was in the shower in our basement.  AKA - my husband's shower.  Picture this - floor to ceiling dark grey tile, covered with white soap scum and hard water residue in a 4x4 shower. Nice eh?  Well...nice when it's CLEAN!  Anyway - I sprayed it on and within 20 seconds it was pretty hard to breathe.  I wasn't prepared for the smell.  Not bad, just strong.  Since then I've used it many times and have gotten used to it.  I don't even notice it anymore.  And it doesn't linger - it goes away as soon as the stuff is rinsed off.

Back to the point.

It WORKED!!  Not only did it WORK it was AMAZING!!  

I sprayed it on (left the room to breathe), waited for 15 minutes and came back to rinse it off.  I took a damp sponge and wiped everything down, I didn't scrub, I just wiped the surfaces.  Then I rinsed it all and let it dry.

I'm telling you - AMAZING!!

The shower was sparkling clean.  The glass doors, the tile, the hardware.  All clean and sparkly with no water spots or streaks at all.  It also stayed that way for several days and when I cleaned it a few days later, it was so easy.  I hardly used any spray the second time and it rinsed easily.

This stuff is FAR BETTER than anything I've tried before.

The cost difference is good but not super-crazy-amazing (yes, I'm 34 and just said that!) The store bought stuff I was using was Snuggle Ultra Cuddle Up Fresh. 

The product I have been using pretty exclusively has been Scrubbing Bubbles with Bleach bathroom cleaner.  I've tried the others but this one did the best job for me until now.  The bottle that we used to buy was $4.99 on sale, was a 750ml bottle and typically lasted about 4 "cleans" (for me, a "clean" is 2 showers (1 regular size and 1 4x4 huge shower and the whirlpool tub)

Scrubbing Bubbles - $4.99/750ml
Homemade - $1.08/ 750ml

SAVINGS OF $3.91/bottle 

Here is how I did it and what it cost.


Shower and Tub Cleaner



Ingredients



·      1 cup dawn dishwashing liquid

·      2 cups white vinegar


Directions

1.     Heat vinegar, add dawn and mix.

Yield

·     750ml

Cost

·      Dawn dishwashing liquid ($2.49/750ml) = $0.83/1 cup
·      Vinegar ($1.49/4litres) = $0.25/2 cups
·      Total - $1.08