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- To help Americans make the most out of their spring cleaning efforts, the Institute for Inspection Cleaning and Restoration Certification (IICRC) has identified eight tools that all spring cleaners should keep handy.
- Clamp down on one more kind of computer clutter.
- Laura Dellutri's tips for getting in the mood to clean
- EPA advises caution with pesticides used for bed bug infestations and suggests non-chemical methods to eliminate and prevent bed bugs.
- Decide whether cleaning with essential oils is a good fit for your home.
- Use methods, products and tools that work for you, not against you, to make your home a healthier place. HousekeepingChannel.com interviews David Mudarri, formerly of the Indoor Environments Division of the EPA.
- Exposing myths of green cleaning.
- Studies show an estimated 32 percent of people who own a two-car garage can only get one car inside because of the clutter. Here's what to do.
- Prepping our indoor living environment for the upcoming cold season and holidays can be a chore all by itself! Here's how to meet the challenge.
- Study shows vacuuming & steam
vapor sanitizing effective.
- Facts about factory-finished and unfinished floors.
- There are five general principles of cleaning up - or remediating - mold.
- The environment in our homes has a big impact on the quality of our lives and health. Give your house a check-up with these tips.
- Simple ways to go green when you clean.
- The good news is that the most difficult and expensive measures are not always the most effective – nor are they always necessary.
- 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.
- After the storm, is the food in your refrigerator still safe to eat?
- Pithy advice for getting control of your basement.
- Determine your course of action by the type of wall found underneath.
- 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.

