Solutions Cleaning Products

On 11 June, 2010, in Cleaning Tips, by Nick Vassilev

The market is flooded with hundreds and thousands of solutions cleaning products. However people are always on the lookout for effective solutions for cleaning. You can use the traditional or conventional products, but some of these may be harmful to the skin and general health due to their semi-poisonous fumes and harmful chemicals. Today, there has been a significant shift from the conventional products to natural and biodegradable cleaning products. The biodegradable products are safe to use and environment friendly and have many advantages. You can use many natural cleaning solutions like lemon juice, vinegar, mineral oils, pine oils, vegetable extracts, fruit extracts and so on which are safe and less expensive than the other products.

Daily Cleaning: All people would love to stay in sparkling clean houses. One has to take due care on a regular basis to keep one’s house neat and tidy. If one plans out a daily and regular cleaning schedule, then the task is simplified to a great extent and one will be able to achieve it easily as well. You can work out a time table for a daily, weekly and monthly task. In this way, you will not be overloaded with work at one time. Kitchen cleaning and bathroom cleaning can be done on a daily basis. You can do the vacuum cleaning and dusting on a weekly basis. The curtains and furnishings can be washed once every two months and so on.

Cleaning Products Solutions: The consumers can choose from a wide range of cleaning products solutions based on their requirements. The various types of cleaning liquids available are liquid detergents, detergent boosters, delicate fabric wash liquids, hydrogen peroxide bleaching agent, detergent neutralizer, fabric softener, machine ware washing liquid detergent, liquid rinse aid, silver ware detarnisher, lime scale remover, grease cutter, surface sanitizer, shower sprays, antibacterial liquid hand soap wash, floor cleaner, bathroom cleaner, odorisers, glass cleaning solutions, carpet cleaners and so on. There are some specialty products also like floor polish, wooden surface polish, metal polish water based and solvent based stain removers.

Different Brands for Solutions Cleaning Products: There are many brands in the market for solutions of cleaning products. They include Stanley Home Care Products of the Fuller Brush Company, CleanAir America, Blue Wonder, American Cleaning Solutions and Clean Solutions and so on. You can get extremely valuable resources online as well for the purpose of cleaning solutions.

In the fast moving and jet setting world of toady, life has become very busy and not much time is left for tasks like house cleaning. Both the partners are busy with their respective careers and have little time for cleaning up of the house. In USA, professional home cleaning solutions are offered by US House Cleaning Services. Home Cleaning is a booming business in the USA.

Natural Solutions for Cleaning Products: Natural solutions used in cleaning products are getting popular by the day as they are efficient, effective, cheap and biodegradable. They have many health benefits and reduce the chemical pollution to a great extent. You can make home based cleaning products by using various natural ingredients like baking soda, borax, white vinegar, washing soda, isopropyl alcohol and so on.

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Q: How often should I clean my bathroom?
A: Weekly is about right, unless someone has made a real mess. Toilets – if you have a toilet in the bathroom – may need cleaning even more frequently.

Q: How do I clean the bath?
A: Shake a whole lot of baking soda inside it. Then scrub at that grey ring and the like using a soft cloth. If you really want to cheat, you can use those face flannels that need to go out to the wash. Work systematically round the bath. Don’t forget the lip around the bath. You may need to pick at soap scraps with your fingernails to get them loose. Then rinse off the residue. Finally, get a dry flannel or dry cloth and give the taps a good buff-up. If they have a lot of limescale or soap scum on them, spray them with a mixture of vinegar and water first.

Q: There’s a bit of mouldy stuff where the bath meets the wall. What can I do about it?
A: If the mould is growing on the wall itself, douse the wall with neat lemon juice or vinegar to kill the mould spores. If the mould is growing on a flannel or loofah type thingy, then remove it, soak it in vinegar and leave it for a bit. Then wash it as normal and leave it to dry. Return it and make sure you hang it up so it can drip-dry properly and won’t get mouldy again. If the mould is growing on a home-made facemask, throw it out immediately and do not attempt to use it. If the mould is growing on an apple core left after you had a few nibbles in the bath, you are an utter slob and you should hire a professional cleaner if you don’t like cleaning to stop this sort of health hazard happening again – or else change your ways.

Q: How do I the glass shower door?
A: Clean this exactly the way that you’d clean other glass things, which includes the mirror. Shake up a mix of vinegar, water (about 50:50) and essential oil, then spray it all over the glass. Then give it a good rubbing with a soft cloth and you will find all the soap scum, etc. vanishing.

Q: How do I clean the carpet in the bathroom?
A: Get rid of it immediately. Bathroom carpets are highly insanitary. Double or even quadruple that if the loo lives in the bathroom. The same goes for those little mats that sit around the bottom of the toilet – yuck, yuck, yuck! If you find cold feet are a problem, wear slippers. And if you need to catch drips after getting out of the bath so you don’t slip, then learn what bath mats are for. Change and wash bath mats weekly or twice weekly, or whenever they get so sodden they don’t have a snowball’s chance in Gehenna of drying.

Q: But I can’t rip it up – this is a rental property.
A: Why do landlords seem to think that rental properties can have substandard decor and good taste (although, to be fair, my landlord doesn’t)? I’d like to say that you’re excused from cleaning it apart from the regulation hiring out of a steam cleaner when tidying up prior to moving out, but this would be unhygienic. Raise the matter with the landlord next time he/she pops in for a property inspection, and mention the increased potential for wet and dry rot as well as the sanitary reasons. Consider moving to another place.

Q: I’ve got blood on the bathroom carpet. How do I clean that up?
A: If the blood got there from a nosebleed, a cut finger or that-time-of-the-month, then sponge it very liberally with fresh cold water, then scrub it with soap and more cold water before blotting up. Repeat if necessary. If you have killed the landlord in sheer frustration at having to live with the bathroom carpet, then cleaning up the mess is only one of your worries – and the boys and girls in blue will still be able to find traces and slap you behind bars. Plead insanity induced by vile wallpaper patterns – which you probably also have to live with.

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