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- Make your professional or family photographs last.
- An Environmental Protection Agency list of indoor pollutants and solutions that could affect your health.
- Every year the combination of winter storms and frozen pipes causes millions of dollars in water damage to homes and buildings. Here's what you can do to prevent problems or clean up.
- Despite the variety in dish liquid scents, colors, prices, and claims, each one works about as well as the next one.
- Careful maintenance of your home's outer shell prevents costly indoor messes caused by water damage later.
- How differing personality types affect your home and your family: an interview with Hannah Keeley.
- It takes more to get rid of fleas than simply treating your pet.
- It’s not just you — many people have trouble throwing away. If you’re asking, “Should I keep that?” the Housekeeping Channel has the right answers.
- Is your budget squeezed by high electric bills? Put your house on an energy “diet.”
- The Carpet & Rug Institute provides answers to commonly asked questions about carpets, asthma and allergies.
- The IICRC answers several commonly asked questions about professional carpet cleaning.
- Spilled wine should be cleaned up quickly.
- Technical tips on removing fire retardants.
- Most of us will have to go into the hospital some day. Here are specific steps you can follow to protect yourself from hospital infections.
- Discover how soil-filtration lines develop and how to address them.
- A safety alert from the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
- Specially designed laundry detergent and high-efficiency washing machines can reduce water and energy use to as low as 20 percent of that consumed by the conventional load of laundry.
- Hannah Keeley offers this first installment in her Healthy Home series about hidden dangers in your home — and what to do about them.
- How to make your own formulas for a more natural approach to cleaning.
- What exactly is soap? What is detergent? Many home cleaning products are classified as either soaps or detergents. Interestingly, many people really don’t know what these everyday words mean. However, it’s a good idea to take the time to learn, so you can understand their basic similarities and differences.

