
WINDOW CLEANER
1/4-1/2 teaspoon liquid detergent
3 tablespoons vinegar
2 cups water
Spray bottle
Put all the ingredients into a spray bottle, shake it up a bit, and use as you would a commercial brand. The soap in this recipe is important. It cuts the wax residue from the commercial brands you might have used in the past.
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Read more: Eco-friendly tips, Green, Home, Household Hints, Non-Toxic Cleaning, cleaners, DIY, non-toxic, recipes

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Useful tip, thanks.
she must be very heavy )))))) everybody needs a hug :)
I wish Governor Hickenlooper would move to Texas and become our Governor. John C./Houston, Tx.
love it! another good old natural remedy to add to the growing list:)
I'm not sure the exact definition of "baby boomers" nowadays. During the 60's and 70's, those who w…
944 comments
+ add your ownThanks for sharing!
Great info. Love the DIY non-toxic aspect. Saves money on toxic cleaners!!
Thank you for sharing.
Thanks, great tips.
THANKS
The cleaning ought to be both to our home and environment
will get some vinegar and baking soda this weekend for my big spring cleaning; the creamy soft scrubber will be the first thing I try, really hate using all the toxic cleaners so this might be a good substitute
I will put all these to practice
In regards to soap scum, vinegar will not remove soap scum because it is acidic. Vinegar is acetic acid, a "weak" acid. Very few cleaning chemicals contain acetic acid because in reality acetic acid doesn't do a great job. BioWorx.us has a green shower cleaner that dissolves soap scum. It does a great job because it is alkaline, the opposite of vinegar.
Baking soda & vinegar are the way to go. It's cheaper & better for the environment. There's a forum post here with some details on how to make a marble cleaner as well (you need bleach for this one, so perhaps not as healthy), but definitely an improvement on buying that stuff.
http://www.consumerfu.com/forums/money-saving-tips/making-your-own-cleaning-supplies
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