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Unusual Uses For Usual Items

Stocking vacuums, coffee ground fertilizer, and the many uses for lemons.

Many ordinary items found at home have more than one purpose. We’re living in a disposable age where nothing’s meant to last, but that doesn’t mean you can’t do something about it. Here are some unusual yet effective uses for everyday stuff found at home:

Newspapers

 

Power outages are becoming more common these days, due partly to growing demand and dated power grids. The next time your power goes out and you don’t want to lose all that food in your freezer, crumple up some newspaper and fill in the empty spaces. Your food will stay frozen longer because there won’t be air space between items. You can also use newspaper to deodorize small areas like food containers or shoes.

Coffee Grounds

 

Think twice before you toss those coffee grounds. It can be used for many things, including fertilizer for your plants and vegetables. Coffee also makes a great natural odor eliminator. Put some grounds in an empty container, poke holes in the top and leave it on the counter or stick it in the fridge to keep things smelling fresh.

Stockings

 

Consider using old pantyhose as a polishing or dusting cloth for household furnishings like lamps and tables. Do you have a lost object (like a missing earring) that you don’t want to accidentally vacuum up? Stretch some pantyhose over the vacuum hose and fasten with the elastic from the pantyhose band. Take advantage of elasticity in general by tying up objects. Do you need a temporary fix for the hole in your screen door?Patch it up with some hosiery!

Lemons

 

If you have expired, wrinkly lemons in the fridge or leftover lemons from lemonade, don’t throw them in the compost just yet. Lemon juice contains strong acid that destroys bacteria. You can use that juice to disinfect things uses like chopping blocks and counter surfaces, or whiten your fingernails by rubbing the lemon over them. You can even brighten your laundry whites by adding half a cup of lemon juice to a normal load of laundry!

Tennis Balls

 

It turns out tennis balls aren’t just for playing tennis. If your floors are scuffed, there’s no need for expensive and harsh cleaners. Put a tennis ball on the end of a stick or a broom and rub it over those stubborn scuffs. Tennis balls can also help prevent your floor from being scratched by furniture. Cut some in half and attach to the ends of chair legs. The next time you’re doing laundry, go ahead and throw a couple of tennis balls in the dryer. They’ll fluff up your clothes and make your load dry faster!

And if you can’t find another use for your everyday items, you can always have 1-800-GOT-JUNK? clear them out for you!

 

Post republished from original article by 1-800-GOT-JUNK