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- The kinds and care of leather upholstery.
- Consumer Reports tests find four recommended products consumers can use under new low-phosphate laws.
- More than 70 percent could better manage asthma triggers, EPA survey finds.
- Use soft water and you'll do less hard scrubbing.
- Tom McNulty brings order to a traditionally male-dominated territory.
- Place the right type and length of walk-off matting outside and inside exterior doors to stop dust, dirt and moisture from entering.
- At-home parties and other get-togethers can nearly triple the weekly cleaning time spent by women.
- Triclosan, an antimicrobial chemical, is now incorporated into many products, such as cutting boards and shower curtains. What kind of protection does it offer?
- The closest thing you'll find to a miracle cleaning material:
microfiber is hot.
- It's dark, it's dangerous, and it's alive....
- Dave Ramsey offers techniques to build a good work ethic in your children as they tackle their household chores.
- Getting the most from your outside cleaning service may boil down to your own managing and motivational skills.
- Carpet cleaning advice for those really muddy, dirty carpet situations.
- Dust mites are not only found in beds, they are virtually everywhere.
- Clean Hands Week provides a refresher course in handwashing.
- We only have one earth. Love it, and when you clean, think “green” or natural.
- Anyone who has washed or worn white clothes knows that white shirts stop looking white after a few washes and start to turn a shade of gray. A new laundry-detergent enzyme helps prevent this from happening, without the use of bleach.
- Webpage provides direct access to information on cleaning product ingredients.
- You can't see it. You can't smell it. But you can take steps against radon in your home, starting with an inexpensive test.
- When a school looks clean and healthy, people tend to have a positive attitude about it. But looks can be deceiving: a clean-looking school may have been cleaned merely for appearance and not for health. Desks may have heavy chemical residues and bacterial contamination. Restrooms may have been treated with a harsh disinfectant — the sink handles wiped but not sanitized. A fragranced deodorizer or air freshener may be hanging in the air emitting chemicals without addressing the source of the odor.

