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- The CRI Seal of Approval program identifies effective carpet cleaning solutions and equipment. Only the best pass the test.
- The IICRC provides tips for fire victims facing clean up.
- Spring cleaning is a misnomer! Fall is by far the best time to clean.
- Don't let cleaning take over your schedule.
- There is one simple step to improving the cleanliness of your carpet and the indoor air quality in your home: regular vacuuming with a CRI-certified machine.
- Naturally, the best way to prevent odor is to eliminate its source (e.g., take out the garbage, smoke or keep pets outside, etc.), but what about existing odors already permeating your home?
- In many cases restoration can cost less than replacement.
- Here are some tips from the International Executive Housekeepers Association (IEHA) on how to properly care for and maintain one of the hardest working surfaces in your house.
- Step by step, whip the water closet into a clean place to be.
- While motivation to clean often comes easier in the Spring, with sunny days, warmer weather and nature in bloom; the right attitude, tools and know-how truly make the difference.
- Steam vapor cleaning differs from traditional "steam cleaning" of carpet.
- A little light work keeps floors protected and clean.
- By showing it a little TLC and implementing these IICRC suggestions, our furniture can continue doing what it does best - supporting us and looking good!
- Organizing your whole home can be overwhelming, but by prioritizing and breaking down projects into small doable tasks, it can be much easier.
- Inside tips for making these hard surfaces easy to maintain.
- Extend the useful life of upholstered furniture and keep it looking great by caring for it properly.
- When Consumer Reports talks, people listen.
- Mastery of the basics will help ensure your carpet stays clean and healthy.
- Start working efficiently now to take the "big" out of the big spring projects.
- What you don’t see can hurt you. Invisible to the naked eye, a world of microorganisms (living things so small you need a microscope to see them) lives in soil, on your skin, in your mouth, on the floor, doorknobs, cell phones, walls, computer keyboards, or countertops — pretty much everywhere.

