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Astounding cleaning products

(146 Posts)
LuckyDucky Wed 04-Nov-15 07:22:12

To clean a lavatory? Pour in a can of coke cola around. Leave it for a few minutes. Result Sparkly clean grin

Precoat stove tops by using car wax. It's great to see a shine.

Oil spatters? 2 drops of mineral oil on kitchen tissue, wipe and yucky,
gloop comes right off grin

Anyone have a messy cleaning job and use a product not associated with cleaning?

oldgoat Tue 16-Feb-16 18:42:54

Thanks for the tip on cleaning marble f77ms.I'll give it a try where it won't show, just in case. Obviously not a job for white vinegar though!

shysal Tue 16-Feb-16 17:13:25

I have read that tomato ketchup removes the smell of fox poo from a dog who has rolled in it. Leave on for 10 minutes then use a mild shampoo.

f77ms Tue 16-Feb-16 16:41:22

Oldgoat , I have just googled cleaning marble and it says use very diluted washing up liquid and warm water then wipe with plain water and dry . It also says anything acid like lemon will damage the marble . Hope this helps .

oldgoat Mon 15-Feb-16 21:45:26

I've just bought a marble-topped coffee table from a furniture shop clearance sale. It doesn't have any care instructions and the shop couldn't help either. I tried some of the marble polish I use on my fireplace but it made the stone (on the edge of the table where it shouldn't show) look darker. Any suggestion how to look after marble, please?

f77ms Mon 15-Feb-16 20:37:53

I have a 150 year old household management book which I treasure . Some of the `tips` are hilarious though .....
A spoonful of gunpowder on a good thick fig ( a cure for constipation)
Rub your head with paraffin every night for a week but avoid a naked flame ( male baldness)
A spoonful of brandy in babies bottle before bed ( sleepless nights in infants)

I have another called The Home Surgeon ! If the illness doesn`t kill you the `cure` certainly will !

storynanny Mon 15-Feb-16 19:00:09

Any tips for making a stainless steel sink shiny in a hard water area?

Forgive my total ignorance about using white vinegar for multi cleaning jobs, but is that ordinary white malt vinegar or something else?

Greymary Mon 15-Feb-16 18:01:51

Wouldn't be without a few bottles of white vinegar, it's a very useful cleaner.

I have some old style kitchen scales with brass weights. I clean the weights (very fiddly things) by soaking them in a bowl of cola (any brand!).

Cola is really good for cleaning fiddly brass items by soaking, just a quick buff up after.

I'm pretty sure my mother used brown sauce to clean brass sometimes when the Brasso had run out.

From this thread sounds as if Cola, white vinegar, soda crystals and bicarb are all we need wink

hildajenniJ Mon 15-Feb-16 14:10:05

If you move furniture, put ice cubes into the indentations. When they melt and dry the carpet springs back, and you can't tell where the sofa stood.

Av1dreader Mon 15-Feb-16 13:50:07

Couldn't se the marks

Av1dreader Mon 15-Feb-16 13:49:24

I love white vinegar use it all the time. My son used a fork to fluff up my parents carpet when we moved the furniture for them. I was surprised but it worked. Two weeks later when I visited you could see the marks at all.

K8tie Mon 15-Feb-16 12:20:04

Not seen any mention of my favourite one!
I buy cheap own brand white vinegar 49p or so . . . then I put it [undiluted] into a good quality spray bottle and add 20 drops of peppermint essential oil. I have tried other scents but the peppermint leaves a room smelling fresh and clean.
I use this for everything mostly - and it brings up stainless steel/chrome/glass very well. I read that is the stuff [without the oils] that chefs use to clean their counters that does not interact with food and is anti fungal, etc etc.
In fact it is the only thing I use now except for a bottle of thick bleach for the stubborn things which I very rarely use. This gets ALL my cleaning including the loos. Give it a try as I do think cleaning stuff prices are crazy high now.
Bicarb for the burnt saucepans though is a given!

annodomini Fri 12-Feb-16 13:23:49

I tried using an egg pricker but on several occasions managed to break the egg in the process - probably my inadequacy rather than the gadget's.

JanT8 Fri 12-Feb-16 13:03:11

I saw on the 'gadget' page an egg pricker to stop eggs from cracking when boiling. Putting a live matchstick in the pan works 'eggsactly' (sorry, couldn't resist that!) the same. No more cracked eggs.

rosequartz Tue 15-Dec-15 17:58:18

---- then I go on GN for a bit

I have such plans when I wake up
Then I get out of bed .....

Anniebach Tue 15-Dec-15 14:15:45

I start with a mug of tea , then make a list then - - - -

loopyloo Tue 15-Dec-15 14:04:26

My place is a real mess. Where do I start? What do other people start with ?

wembleycleaner Tue 01-Dec-15 11:40:18

Message deleted by Gransnet for breaking our forum guidelines. Replies may also be deleted.

FarNorth Sat 28-Nov-15 19:37:01

That sounds so sensible shodatin. I'll deffo give it a go.

shodatin Sat 28-Nov-15 00:44:15

I stopped using bath/shower mats years ago, when a retired nurse told me about using a tea-cloth or similar piece of fabric. It's definitely non-slip and easy to wash and dry; no more mouldy plastic to clean, they just go in the washing machine.

numberplease Fri 20-Nov-15 22:02:12

?

mrsmopp Fri 20-Nov-15 18:17:33

Numberplease,
I have to ask, did she also make knickers out of old dishcloths too?
Wasn't it called Make Do and Mend?
[hmmm]

annodomini Thu 19-Nov-15 18:23:39

If soil from the garden works to remove stains from china, surely any abrasive cleaner would also work. I swear by Barkeeper's Friend (mildly abraisve) for removin stains on cups, worktops, hob and just about any other hard surface.

numberplease Thu 19-Nov-15 17:29:45

Another tip for getting tea stains off the insides of cups is to rub the stains with soil from the garden, then wash well.
Something my MIL told me years ago, and which I still do, is to put a drop of bleach in my washing up water, it keeps dishcloths clean and fresh. She also used to use up her old knickers as dishcloths, but that one I haven`t done!

allule Thu 19-Nov-15 13:24:37

Charleygirl. He tried a stool, but it took up too much room. We have grip rails all round, which help. Thanks for your interest.

rosequartz Wed 18-Nov-15 20:24:06

I confess that I use a proprietary cleaner such as Mr Muscle or Flash for that yucky job, and a new filter every so often.

It's the oven I hate cleaning, I may even get someone in next time .....

Milton is good for removing stains as well (in cups etc)