10 Golden Rules of Cleaning

warda A

Sister
:salam2:

Do you find cleaning time consuming or fun?

10 Golden Rules of Cleaning
Cut cleaning time in half with these 10 essential tips.
From 2,001 Amazing Cleaning Secrets


Stick to these ten rules, and get your cleaning done quickly and effortlessly.


1. Clean it up sooner than later
Spills and stains are generally much easier to clean up when you attack them right away. When you treat that tomato sauce splatter on your dress shirt without delay, for instance, it offers little resistance. If you wait until the next day, you'll be sporting a permanent-looking red polka dot that you'll expend a lot more cleaning solution and time getting out. Similarly, clothing or carpet stains are easiest to remove when they're fresh. The longer you wait, the more chance the stain has to set.

The rare exception to this rule: Mud tracked onto your carpet is easiest to clean when you've let it dry first. Wait until it's bone dry and crumbly; then just vacuum it up.

2. Clean from the top down
Don't fight gravity when you clean. You'll lose. Working from high to low almost always works better in cleaning situations.

When you're cleaning the entire house, start on the top floor and work your way down to avoid tracking through rooms you have already cleaned. When you're cleaning a room, first remove the cobwebs from the ceiling and upper molding. Then dust the ceiling fan and light fixtures, followed by window frames and wall hangings. Moving downward, conquer the furniture, baseboards, and floors. This ensures that any dust shaken loose from on high does not settle on something you've already cleaned below. You don't want to dust the room twice, do you?

Similarly, when you clean windows and mirrors, start up high and work your way down, because your cleaner obeys gravity. This saves you elbow grease and time. The rare exception to this rule is wall washing. If you start at the top when you're washing a wall in your home, dirty water will drip onto the lower areas you haven't cleaned yet, making streaks that will be tough to remove.

3. Think dry, then wet
When you're cleaning a room, start with the cleaning jobs that require dry methods (dusting, sweeping, and vacuuming, for instance). Then move on to wet methods (using an all-purpose cleaner and glass cleaner, mopping, and the like). This way, there will be less dirt floating around in the room to cling to wet surfaces.

4. Start with the least harmful approach
Use your gentlest cleaning methods first and move up to more aggressive techniques only if necessary. And know your materials well enough so that you will stop your cleaning efforts before you do damage. Better to suffer along with a small spot on your stovetop, for instance, than to ruin the surface with steel wool.

5. Let time do the work for you
A little time management trick will make your cleaning easier and faster. When you plot out your approach to a cleaning task, remember to spray on your cleaning chemicals first and then find another little job to do while the cleaner does its dirty work. If you're cleaning in the kitchen, for instance, spray your cleaner on the counter and appliances, then occupy yourself with removing old food from the refrigerator while the cleaner soaks in. When you come back to wipe clean, there will be little or no scrubbing to do.

6. Carry your supplies with you
Carry your core cleaning products with you. This will save you from making multiple trips around the house looking for the right tools and cleaners. Pick up one of these accessories at a home improvement store or hardware store:
a. A cleaning caddy -- a plastic or rubber carrier with a handle and compartments for holding your gear
b. A sturdy, large plastic bucket with a good handle
c. A rolling supply cart
d. An apron with roomy pockets
Put all of your cleaning supplies into the receptacle you've chosen, including clean rags, paper towels, and a trash bag for emptying all of those wastebaskets, and cart it with you from room to room. If your house has more than one floor, keep a fully stocked caddy on each level.

Don't weigh your carrier down with specialty products that are needed for only one job around the house. Store toilet bowl cleaner, for instance, under the bathroom sink.

7. When in doubt, make a stealth test
Before you use a new cleaning technique or product, test the method on an inconspicuous area of the object you're cleaning. This rule also applies when you first clean an object that is delicate and might be damaged by a cleaning compound. Testing will show you whether the object is colorfast and whether the cleaning method is likely to do damage.

8. Don't deluge easily damaged items
When you clean an item that could be harmed by a liquid cleaning product (electronics, computer screens, framed artwork, or framed photographs, for example), first spray the cleaner on your cleaning cloth and then wipe. Don't spray cleaner directly on the object you're cleaning. Cleaner dripping into your electronics could do damage, and cleaner dripping into a frame and soaking the matting could harm your artwork.

9. Yes, you've heard this before
But the makers of all of those wonderful furnishings in your house do know best how to clean them. And the makers of your cleaning products know best how to use them. So when at all possible, follow the manufacturer's directions when cleaning anything. This goes for everything from toasters to silk blouses and down comforters to miniblinds. File the directions and cleaning tips that come with any new appliance, rug, or other household item. Don't remove those care labels that come on clothes, linens, and other potentially washable objects.

10. Protect thyself
Last but not least, take care of yourself. Many cleaning products contain acid, bleach, abrasives, and other ingredients that can damage your eyes, skin, nose, and even your lungs. So make sure your cleaning kit includes a pair of rubber gloves and protective safety glasses. If it's not too steamy, wear old long pants or sweats and an old long-sleeved shirt to cover your arms in case of spatters from cleaning products. Cover your hair with a kerchief or baseball cap.

To protect your nails, dab a line of petroleum jelly underneath your nails to keep out dirt. Dot more on your cuticles to keep them from drying out, roughening, and splitting from exposure to cleaning chemicals. Don't let your cleaning products get mixed together. Some combinations--chlorine bleach and ammonia, for instance--will produce poisonous gases. When you're using cleaning chemicals, make sure the room you're in is properly ventilated.
 

hijab_sister

ALLAH is in my heart
salam
MASHA ALLAH great job.
im surprised y not replies to this thread.
but i liked it alot.
it was great.
jazakallahum khair for sharing.sister
FI AMANILLAH
 

warda A

Sister
salam
MASHA ALLAH great job.
im surprised y not replies to this thread.
but i liked it alot.
it was great.
jazakallahum khair for sharing.sister
FI AMANILLAH

:salam2:

Lolz sister, i wondering the same here and i thought maybe everyone knows the rules,but i did not know about the vaseline under the nails, but you could use wax as my sibling told me
:wasalam:
 

Vandrobr

New Member
My wife decided that the best place for a pool would be on the roof of the house. Do you think I was upset? Of course I was upset because the pool collects more rubbish than if it was on the ground. At first I hired a cleaner, but here's the catch. If you pay medium or little, he won't do his job properly. If you pay a lot, it's a blow to my wallet. Saving money or not, you know, that's up to everyone. However, I have already started to lose my mind on this economy. Honestly, I don't particularly like water. It's all for my wife's benefit. But hand-cleaning the pool is just an unbearable horror for me. But you know I can complain here and in fact the main thing is not to be desperate and behave decently in any situation. As much as I hate to do it, I have to admit that a woman's gratitude sometimes makes superheroes out of men. Of course not like in these comic book movies, but still something close to the spirit is present here.
 

Shimpa

New Member
I live in a resort town. My uncle is the manager of a hotel that has a penthouse with a pool. Due to the fact that there are quite a few visitors in the season, manually cleaning the pool in the middle of the day is kind of weird you know. The director conferred with the receptionists about it and my uncle advised them to get a Nautilus CC Plus. Well, I can't say the cleaners have any less work now, it's more concentrated. But the pool is no longer afraid of dust or lots of people. They have stopped chasing birds so frantically from the area just to make sure nothing gets in the water or you know, when a strong wind suddenly something gets on the roof, they are right on top of it. This robot can maintain the pool by itself and is easy to clean. Uncle says big changes are coming in all areas of life if science continues to give us such simplifications.
 
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