The Seven Uses Of Vinegars

Author: admin  /  Category: Cleaning

In addition to taste and remove the acid tang, vinegars also have other benefits. Vinegar or acetic acid was able to overcome various problems cleaning the house. Starting from shower clogged, grimy floors, to clean the crust of the bottle. How to use it is very easy. These seven benefits of vinegar can be applied at home:

1. Clogged shower
Iron-containing water, soil, or fine sand can be a culprit. To fix this, prepare 1 liter of hot water, then pour one cup vinegar and stir to eat. Soak the shower head in this solution for 10 minutes. Lift and clean. Shower problem solved already clogged.

2. Blender Gross
Use a blender usually leave stains. Sometimes it is difficult to remove stains. If that happens, use a mixture of water, dish soap, and vinegar. Pour the mixture into a blender and turn on the blender for 30 seconds. Discard the water mixture and rinse with warm water.

3. Faded floors
Ceramic floor above the age of five years is usually turned into a dirty and dull. To clean it, pour the vinegar into the surface of the floor. Let stand for five minutes. Then wipe with a clean cloth. Mop once again with water to remove the smell of vinegar.

4. Rust on metals
to remove rust, prepare a tablespoon of vinegar mixed with one teaspoon of salt. Rub the mixture into the rusty metal utensils. After the rust away, wash with water and dried.

5. Broken Vases
Cracked jars no longer a problem too. Make a mixture of a small packet of jelly, one tablespoon of vinegar, stirring until thickened. Use this mixture as a glue mixture. Glue each section broken jug. After the dough is dry in the sun until the glue is dry. The jar was returned intact.

6. Time Oil
In order to grease the pan easy to clean, pour the vinegar into 2 liters of water. Dip the pan into it oily. Oil stains will fade and then rinse the pot with clean water.

7. Crust Bottle
Crust in the bottle can be dealt with vinegar. Enter the soapy water into the bottle. Add one tablespoon of ash scrub and a tablespoon of vinegar. Let stand for 10 minutes. Then shake and brush the inside of the bottle. Crust in the bottle is gone

How To Caring Your Linen

Author: admin  /  Category: Cleaning

Linen is one of the easier natural fabrics to care for, especially in articles of regular use.
Needless to say, this is what has made it a ubiquitous presence in households all over the world – in bedclothes, for clothing, for tablecloths and toiletries, there is absolutely no substitute for linen fabrics.
While washing, drying and ironing linen fabrics, here are some tips you should follow:

  1. Wash your linens often. Unlike many fabrics that lose their shine after a wash, linen fabrics grow soft and shiny after you wash and iron them. When not washed for months, linen can grow brittle and even break due to dryness.
  2. Your detergents should be either pure soap or a very gentle detergent. The detergents found for use on woolen garments work beautifully here.
  3. Do not wash light and dark linens together, as linen dyes tend to run a lot. Add some salt and vinegar to the water in which you wash dark linens, as this will prevent fading.
  4. Avoid chlorine bleach on your linens – oxygen bleaches work just fine to keep your whites sparkling. On darker linens, avoid bleach of any sort as it may lead to patchy discoloring. Oxy-bleaches also work to remove mildew, which linens are prone to if stored in closed and damp areas for a long time
  5. Use soft water on your linens, as the salts from hard water can form a deposit on the surface and make it brittle.
  6. Linens absorb a lot of water, so soak them with water to spare and avoid loading the washing machine to the maximum.
  7. Do not wring your linens. Squeeze them gently to drain excess water, and then you can line-dry, tumble-dry or lay flat on a towel to complete the drying process. Hanging linen in bright sunlight will bleach it naturally and retain its brightness
  8. Iron your linens – always on the wrong side, and lightly on the right side only for pale colors – while they are still damp, or dampen them before ironing. Do not let the linen become bone-dry under the iron, it runs the risk of becoming brittle.
  9. Clean any mineral deposits off your iron as they may leave stains
  10. Spray on starch at medium to hot temperatures for a crispy texture, and use spray-on fabric sizing for a softer but glazed look

Always keep your linens in “breathable” areas. Do not stuff them into plastic packaging, as this will cause them to wrinkle and dry out, or get mildew from the damp. Also, wash and refold them once in a couple of months in hot and dry climates , as this will preserve the moisture in them and keep them from becoming brittle

Sanitation For Swimming Pool

Author: admin  /  Category: Cleaning

Bathing in swimming pool is very enjoying moment for anyone but if you refuse to proper sanitation then there will be a chance for being sick. To stop the growth of germs in your swimming pool, sanitation of chemicals in pool or spas water is necessary. There are some major points which we have to always remind in our mind.

  • These germs can cause contagion in ears, nose and gullet and possibly other more risky diseases like Meningitis.
  • Germs control is simply consummate by adding a sanitizer (most commonly Hypochlorous Acid or simply “chlorine”) frequently, and then passing the water through a filter to eliminate the dead germs.

We then require being confident that any extra germs inflowing the water is met by a “sanitizer residual” in enough meditation to kill this new germs as frequently as possible.

The swimmers and bathers are the main base for germs in pool’s water. Other sources are top-up water and garbage, such as leaves, grass, soil, etc. Pets can add extensively to germs levels. A large dog can infect up to twenty times the volume of water that a human can.

But it’s not a matter of serious worry. It is generally accepted that most harmful bacteria will be killed when exposed to a “free chlorine residual” as low as one milligram per liter or, in other words one part per million (ppm). By frequently examination of pool’s water and including the desired amount of chlorine to the water, a residual level of 1.0 or 2.0 ppm is simply managed.

Types of chlorine:

There are various forms of chlorine available in the market. Granular, liquid, or tablet, and can also be stabilized or un-stabilized. There is also a product salt water chlorinator available in the market by which chlorine is generated. Each of these different forms has its own characteristics and advantages. For instance, granular chlorine is convenient, easy to store and relatively cheap, however it cannot be dosed automatically. On the other hand, liquid chlorine is bulky and can’t be stored for long periods, but can be dosed automatically. All are suitable sanitizers for your pool, so select the type that best outfits your finances and existence. Anyway you choose any form to use the need for a residual of 1.0 to 2.0 ppm remains the same.

Safety Note:

  • Never mix other chemicals even mixture of chlorine. It may result fire and/or explosion.
  • Stabilizing refers to the mixing of isocyanuric acid (or “Stabiliser”) with chlorine, to protect it from UV rays, which drastically decrease its efficiency. Isocyanuric acid can also be added manually to the pool.

Salt Chlorinator:

As the name suggests, these units produce chlorine in the pool water using a process of electrolysis to convert sodium chloride (salt) into hypochlorous acid. These units are available in different sizes to suit different size pools. Be sure the unit you select is capable of producing sufficient chlorine to meet your maximum requirements. No matter which one you choose, you may still need to add extra chlorine from time to time to make sure a satisfactory residual level is maintained.

The stage of stabilizer in the water should be checked frequently if you are using stabilized chlorine artifacts or are including stabilizer to the pool, the level of, as in doing its job, it does not get used up like other chemicals in the pool. If the stabilizer level gets too elevated, it can in fact restrain the effectiveness of the chlorine.

Chlorine Smell:

Many pool owners criticize about the smell of chlorine and think that the pool may have too much chlorine in it. In fact, the conflicting is most likely the case. Not having enough chlorine in the pool will result in the chlorine smell and also lead to users suffering with sore eyes and itchy skin. The reason this is so, is that a by-product of chlorination is the creation of chloramines. These chloramines are the smelly little beasts that cause all the hassle. For being free from them, we require to add more chlorine. It is for this reason that, from time to time, the pool needs “superchlorination”.

Heated Pool:

A heated pool will need extra chlorine than a non-heated pool. The reason for that is chlorine used up much more speedily in hot water. Stabilized chlorine products should not be used in heated pools as their effectiveness is greatly reduced.

Major Points to remember:

  • Always maintain a chlorine residual of 1.0 to 2.0 ppm (milligrams per litre)
  • Select the product that best suits you
  • Chlorine smell generally means not enough chlorine
  • A heated pool will require more chlorine
  • Never mix chemicals