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Dusting Your House

November 22, 2016

dust covered dryer sheet in woman's handI'm always looking for ways to stretch a dollar, and if I have something that can be used more than once, or for more than one job, I'm sold. I use dryer sheets, but it seems like such a waste to use them once and then throw them away. I discovered that they are great for dusting, and since I'm buying them anyway why not? They seem to have a static charge or something similar. They work very much like Swiffers do without the cost. I keep a little bag on my dryer to collect them. Some dryer sheets work better than others, but they all leave a nice scent behind as an added bonus. Enjoy!

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Re-Use Dryer Sheets for Dusting
 
Re-Use Dryer Sheets for Dusting
 

Comments

November 27, 20161 found this helpful
Top Comment

I only use dryer sheets when I've left a tissue in a pocket. When there's static in the dryer, I'll run a wire hanger over the clothes to remove it.

One way to save, if you want to use sheets all the time, is to cut them in half or even in thirds. For me, a third works just as well as a whole one.

 
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April 12, 2005

You can purchase these at hardware stores, flea markets, etc. we have one and I keep it in my house, plus you can purchase air tanks to use separate. I use a small air compressor for dusting, blowing dust off of curtains etc. I love it.

 
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April 29, 2008

Here are some dusting tips as recommended by our ThriftyFun community. When you dust, start at the top and work down. A clean paint brush is useful for dusting hard to reach places.

 
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October 2, 2008

Buy dryer sheets at your local dollar store. Attach them to the end of your broom and will pick up dust, pet hair, misc. Also, use for dusting furniture.

 
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October 2, 2008
Click to read more ideas from older posts on ThriftyFun.
 
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August 21, 2009

How to keep dust off furniture longer?

By JUDY from Ft. Worth, TX

Answers

August 22, 20090 found this helpful

I painted my walls and apparently didn't let them dry between coats. Now my walls are sticky and collect dust horribly.
I made a vinegar and water mix in a spray bottle and wipe the walls down with that, that lasts up to a month without dust whereas I was needing to dust daily before.

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Try that out on the furniture. It also will not hurt TV or computer screens.

 
August 28, 20090 found this helpful

You can't keep it off, but if you will bite the bullet an invest ev. three months in the Filtrete kind of AC filters the dust will be greatly reduced. Keep all windows/ doors shut, and write on your 1st day of the calendar every three months to change the filters in AC and Vacuum! If you live in a particularly dusty dry area, you will have more, if not, less. Vacuuming the furniture with the furniture attachment about monthly will also keep dust mites that burrow there, way down. Long ago women put washable covers on their furniture, then reduced them to just where the head/ arms/ hands rest, then stopped and now we have lots of dust again, right?

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Vacuuming with the best disposable filters from the VACUUM repair shop (not groc/drug/discount houses)
will be money well spent, if you can do it. I can only afford it if I will sweep any visible debris up with broom/dustpan first, saving the filling
of bags too often.

If you choose not to vacuum the furniture or carpet before steaming them, you will have mud at the base of the fibers which will rot the threads of both as one walks or sits on the mud which becomes super grit sandpaper.

There's a lot to home management properly. Problem is, I hate to do it, must push hard to make myself do it right the first time to prevent less and repeated work later.

Learn from your elders! Also, vacuuming just the traffic paths almost daily will save both your carpet, the dust recycling into the air, and family illnesses!

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Then whole hose weekly because dust is almost invisible!
Don't believe it? Get on your hands and knees and smell your carpet after a week or two of not vacuuming. Then, wait for a sun-beam to flash over some part and hit it with your hand to see how much there really is. It collects fast, so it's an ongoing battle, and one reason housewives/ homemakers Deserve a silver medal and a salary, p e r i o d!
As well as a retirement savings fund other than social insecurity that the govt. Will steal now and blame on you later!

Imagine having to live against the carpet all of the time like we make our poor pets and children!

A house cleaner friend of mine once said, never begin cleaning a room without a garbage bag, a roll of paper towels, Windex and Lemon Pledge. Now that I can barely afford to live I had to improvise:

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I use a garbage can, rags from irreparable, my own homemade Windex, and recycled Transmission Fluid, as well as a huge bowl of every flower petal, pod, interesting twisty thing from nature, and all of the left old undissolved over-dried room fresheners crushed until indistinguishable, placed in the center of the largest room of the house! If body sprays, old colognes, or garage sale potpourris come my way, I add them, changing only if I add something
unpleasant, or if any parts begin looking way too old.

I'm none the worse for all of this savings, and I have some change in my pocket once in a rare while too boot. lol God bless you. : )

 
August 28, 20090 found this helpful

Don't wipe off the dust, at my house it is considered a protective furniture covering! lol

 
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June 3, 2010

Use the lonely lost sock from the dryer as a duster. I turn it inside out and spray furniture polish on it then swipe it where ever there is a hint of dust and voila, the dust is on the sock.

 
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Bronze Tip Medal for All Time! 59 Tips
December 7, 2010

Put on a pair of cotton gloves to quickly dust that furniture if company suddenly stops by, then shake gloves out doors and throw in washer.

 
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Silver Post Medal for All Time! 418 Posts
April 7, 2011

When dusting the house, a clothes basket comes in real handy. As you dust, take all of the stuff off the furniture and place it in the clothes basket.

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After dusting the piece of furniture, wipe off the items and put them back.

 
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June 1, 2011

I had several old socks with holes in them. Darning was not an option. One day I was needing to dust around the TV, stereo, etc., so I grabbed one of them, sprayed on dusting aerosol and put it on like a glove.

 
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August 1, 2011

Having pets in the house causes me to need to dust more often, but not with polish. So, the other day, I was stripping the sheets off the bed, and I took one pillowcase and used it to dust the bedroom.

 
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November 3, 2011

I live way in the country on a dirt road surrounded by trees (pollen). Along with the dust from the road and in the winter from our wood burning stove, I need help with all the dust that I can not remove from my dark finished furniture. I have tried just about everything, but as soon as I am finished, the dust starts collecting again. I am at my wits end in trying to find a solution. I did not mention all that I have tried because the list is endless. Please help me.

By Marlene

Answers


Bronze Post Medal for All Time! 163 Posts
November 4, 20110 found this helpful

Get rid of it and buy lighter furniture. Makes a difference. We bought a black stove one year right before Thanksgiving and it would not stay clean. A year later my daughter needed a stove and I happily obliged her with it. I got me a white one and she has the same stove today. She loves it but it bugged my hubby and myself because it always looked dirty no matter how well it was kept clean.
GL

 

Silver Feedback Medal for All Time! 450 Feedbacks
November 4, 20110 found this helpful

If you plant some fast growing bushes along the road at the end of your yard and let them grow as tall as they can, they will catch most of it. You will have to hose the bushes off often.

 
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