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- Is clutter taking over your kitchen, desk top, entryway, nightstand, and even your car? Learn how to get those hot spots organized and clutter-free!
- HC asked makers of special surfaces how to clean their products. Here are their tips.
- Research shows radar technology could save serious money in mold damage.
- Quick tips: How NOT to use a "laptop" computer.
- Building a personal peace zone is easier than you might think.
- It might surprise you to learn that a household inventory really doesn’t have to be that complicated.
- Nothing is more precious - and vulnerable - than an infant in his/her crib. Follow these important steps to keep your little one safe.
- Do your own carpet cleaning, or let the carpet cleaning pros handle it.
- Answers to this and other important housekeeping questions from cleaning expert Don Aslett.
- Each year, the average American home wastes more than 10,000 gallons of water on easy-to-fix household leaks.
- TURI's lab tests whether vinegar is truly an effective germ killer.
- Don't go down in a blaze, either.
- How to prepare, clean up and store your spread — without the bellyache.
- Society is automatically wired to “spring clean”, when actually spring is NOT the best time to do it.
- Optimize this often overlooked space using a little ingenuity.
- The convenience of microwave cooking can also present a few challenges—such as making sure that food prepared in a microwave is cooked to its safe temperature.
- EPA's Science Advisory Board has identified perchloroethylene as a possible to probable human carcinogen.
- Floods are one of the most common hazards in the United States, however not all floods are alike. Some floods develop slowly, while others such a flash floods, can develop in just a few minutes and without visible signs of rain. Additionally, floods can be local, impacting a neighborhood or community, or very large, affecting entire river basins and multiple states. What can you do after the flood?
- Doing odd jobs around the house need not create more housework.
- Why common household dust behaves as it does.

