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- Small changes in the way you choose cleaning products can make your housecleaning more green and sustainable.
- Learn how to use a squeegee and you'll be done with window cleaning in half the time or less.
- SDA survey shows effectiveness, cost and convenience are top factors in consumers’ cleaning product choices; economy has influenced household cleaning habits of nearly 8 In 10 Americans; 68% still regularly engage in Spring Cleaning; consumers increasingly seeking sustainability benefits in products.
- Are you an informed consumer? Consider these eight myths, and corresponding truths, about vacuuming.
- Take advantage of the seasonal impulse to get moving!
- EPA advises caution with pesticides used for bed bug infestations and suggests non-chemical methods to eliminate and prevent bed bugs.
- 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.
- Inside tips for making these hard surfaces easy to maintain.
- Your home’s exterior takes a beating from mother nature, but you can intervene. A once-or-twice-yearly cleaning may also reveal a gutter or roof in need of attention.
- 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.
- Is the man of your house a little reluctant to wash dishes? Here are a few tips on picking up his motivation.
- Facts about factory-finished and unfinished floors.
- An easy step to clear out the clutter.
- Why and how to work smarter, not harder, to keep your carpet looking great for years to come.
- Simple ways to go green when you clean.
- Spring cleaning is a misnomer! Fall is by far the best time to clean.
- 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.
- How to remove old caulking, treat for mold and apply a new, protective caulk line.
- With or without chemicals, the right approach clears the blockage so water can drain freely.
- 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.

