Yes, you can do all this and take your chances on the outcome. Or you can take a page from the home cleaning book of Experts in Your Home and rely on three products you probably have in your home already: vinegar, baking soda and lemon. They’re natural, they’re inexpensive and they can eliminate any stain or odor in your home. Used alone or together, they work.
In fact, they work so well and have so many uses that it would be impossible to enumerate them all here. The Vinegar Institute (yes, there is such an entity) lists about 1,000 ways to use vinegar around the home. With the spring cleaning season nearly upon us, let the cleaning experts at Experts in Your Home seize upon the high points of these three home cleaning agents – so wonderful that we were “sold” on them a long time ago.
Heed several provisos: Vinegar has acidic qualities, which you may already know if you use it to make salad dressings. For this reason, it shouldn’t be used on granite, marble and stone; the acid can etch the surface. Vinegar can also break down unprotected metals such as aluminum, copper, iron and steel, though it is safe on stainless steel. Use vinegar with caution on all types of wood and wood floors. It should always be tested in a small, inconspicuous first, just to play it safe.
How to use vinegar: Once you make these few subtractions, vinegar still has hundreds of home cleaning uses – from appliances in the kitchen to toilet and shower stains in the bathroom. Pour it directly into a spray bottle when you need it for full-strength cleaning and disinfecting jobs. Or dilute it with some water.
Heed one proviso: Baking soda should not be used to clean aluminum because it can cause discoloration.
How to use baking soda: Baking soda can be sprinkled on top of virtually anything to remove odors, with shoes, carpets and upholstery being the most common. (Vacuum the latter two for best results.) You can put its abrasive cleaning powers to work by mixing it with a little water to create a soda paste. It is gentle enough to use to polish silver flatware but tough enough to dissolve caked-on oven buildup and restore filthy lawn furniture – among hundreds of other uses.
Heed the same provisos as you would with vinegar. Those acidic qualities can backfire on incompatible surfaces.
How to use lemon: You can use real lemons or lemon juice alone to scrub, disinfect and deodorize. It’s a natural companion to baking soda and it bolsters the effectiveness of vinegar.
Part of the fun of using these natural cleaners is to experiment with them and share your success stories. Be sure to pass them along to Experts in Your Home. You never know: we may feature them in our own “infomercial” – or at least share two tips for the “unbelievable” price of one.
If you just can't imagine spending much time cleaning due to a busy schedule, or need some extra help for that big job you haven't gotten to, Experts In Your Home can help with our home cleaning service. Contact us today for a quote!