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- The Maids Home Services provides tips to remove allergy and asthma triggers.
- Be in the know before panicking about mold.
- Swine flu presents a real and present danger to public health. The IEHA is pleased to provide this information from the CDC.
- Fighting the termite battle on the home front.
- Homeowners use water for many purposes, including drinking, cooking, washing, heating, humidifying, flushing (the No. 1 use of water in a home) and their pets. Those are just a few reasons homeowners should make sure they understand what’s in their water.
- You are going to have to confront an unpopular fact: organizing can be painful.
- Make sure your project is a help to your home, not a harm to your body.
- How to remove old caulking, treat for mold and apply a new, protective caulk line.
- Master the secret of easy decorating and cleaning.
- 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.
- Tom McNulty brings order to a traditionally male-dominated territory.
- Proper vacuuming is the easiest and most effective way to keep carpet clean, while having a positive impact on the cleanliness of your home and the air you breathe.
- Choose low-toxicity products that clean well. Green cleaning products are those that clean effectively while minimizing negative impacts to health and the environment.
- Resolutions to keep everyone healthy.
- Careful planning, preparation, and applying can make wallpapering a much easier task.
- Quick tips for making laundry duty faster, easier, and cheaper.
- Consumer Reports confirms that gas-powered pressure washers have a clear performance edge over electric models. But more pressure also means more chance for injury with any pressure washer.
- It’s unwise to think that super filters will solve IAQ problems that originate elsewhere.
- Checklist for routine carpet maintenance carpet cleaning
- Perhaps the traffic areas begin to look crushed or flattened, or you've recently moved your furniture around and there are indentations in the carpet. Are those “dents” permanent? What can be done to preserve carpet’s nap or pile?

