Posts Tagged ‘non toxic clean’

Staying Green: Keep Your Cleaning Eco Friendly

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

By guest writer Izzy Woods

Every Little Bit offers a range of eco-friendly cleaning products which make a real difference in keeping your home clean and free of nasty toxins and chemicals. In addition to their range, there are plenty of cleaning products you can produce at home from simple household items to avoid using dangerous or toxic chemicals.

Whether you need to clean your kitchen floor or refresh your memory foam mattress, there are many natural and organic products you can use to ensure your home remains 100% eco friendly. Many traditional shop-bought household cleaners are full of toxins which can be dangerous to our health and home. Just think, if the bottle advises you to wear protective gloves to use a product, how can it possibly be safe for your home? These chemicals can be harsh and erosive and can be detrimental to your family’s health and your home, furnishings and clothing.

Laundry

To make your own eco-friendly laundry soap, you need to combine 2 cups of natural, organic grated soap, a cup of Borax or a similar product and also a cup of washing soda. Washing soda is a natural product similar to baking soda and should be available in the laundry area in your grocery store. You then need to mix all the ingredients together and store in an air tight container and what’s even more economical is that you should only need two spoons per wash. Also important to note is that over 90% of energy wasted in laundry is due to the heat produced in the washer. Choosing to wash at 30 degrees or even less is the greenest option available to you and conserves energy.

Kitchen and Bathroom Cleaning

Baking soda is a great product for cleaning your bathroom, especially your toilet bowl. Simply sprinkle around 8 spoons of baking soda in your bowl, leave it overnight and it’ll have great results. Additionally, sprinkling soda onto your damp cloth is great for when you’re cleaning the seat and cistern.  For wooden fixtures and fittings in your home, use a combination of 1 part olive oil to 1 part lemon juice and rub and polish with a dry cloth, the results are extremely effective and there’s no dangerous chemicals in sight.

Windows can be cleaned effectively with a combination of vinegar and water. You can either put them together in a spray bottle or apply them directly to the window with a cloth or old newspaper. Newspaper is really good for ensuring your windows are smear free. Lemon is also a great choice for cleaning your kitchen counters and worktops. Simply rub half a lemon across your counters, covering the whole area and wipe clean with a wet sponge or cloth. It smells great too.

If you have any gadgets and appliances such as coffee or smoothie makers, you can also use a vinegar mixture to clean these. Pour equal parts vinegar to equal parts water into the main chamber of the appliance and then switch it on. The vinegar will clean the inside of the machine but remember to run a couple of water cycles through the machine before using again or you’ll have vinegary coffee on your hands.

The Dangers of Traditional Cleaning Products

All cleaners which bear labels with words such as ‘Toxic’ ‘Dangerous’ and ‘Poison’ are not to be trusted. Evidently, these products are a danger and shouldn’t be used in the household, especially when you’re aiming to be as eco friendly as possible. The chemicals contained in these products include dangerous compounds such as hydrochloric acid and phenol. Hydrochloric acid is an irritant which can really cause discomfort if it comes into contact with our clothes or skin, so why is it included in laundry detergents? Equally, phenol is a suspected carcinogen and can be fatal if ingested, so why do we have it in our homes at all?

This is just an example of two of the huge range of chemicals which are found in household cleaning products and as already mentioned, you can do a better, greener job using natural, organic products, in addition to the range available at Every Little Bit.

Eco-friendly Cleaning

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

We came across this great tip list on the site Come Clean Naturally – a Vancouver based cleaning service.  Everyday ingredients to clean all your everyday “stuff”.  Every Little Bit carries several lines of cleaning products, but we wanted to share this list with you too!  Thanks to the team at Come Clean Naturally for letting us use this informative resource.

Eco-friendly cleaning ingredients

Every Little Bit Cleaning

  • Baking Soda (sodium bicarbonate): a non-toxic, all-purpose cleaner. Cleans, removes stains, deodorizes, and softens fabrics.
  • Borax (sodium borate): a natural mineral that kills bacteria and mold. As an alternative to bleach, it deodorizes, removes stains and boosts the cleaning power of soap. Note that borax can be toxic to children and pets: keep these and other toxic products out of their reach, and inform other household members of the whereabouts and purpose of any borax and boric acid in the house.
  • Pure soap (Castile) and vegetable oil-based soaps: cleans everything, and biodegrades completely!
  • Cornstarch: starches clothes, absorbs oil and grease.
  • Herbs and essential oils: for disinfecting and fragrance.
  • Lavender and Tee Tree oils: natural antiseptics which fight bacteria, viruses, and fungi.
  • Lemon juice: cuts through grease and removes perspiration and other stains from clothing. This is a good bleach alternative. (more…)

Sweet Pea in a Pod – Droolicious Review

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Babble

By Elizabeth Leach, Droolicious & Babble.com

Sweet Pea Glass Bottles and Pea Pod Covers are absolutely adorable. I love the baby in the pea pod logo! Of course, more importantly, glass bottles are better for baby because they are BPA free. The brightly colored neoprene bottle cover protects the bottle from breaking and helps keep the milk warm. The colors of the covers are more than just attractive. The creators of Sweet Pea Thumb_Bottle_Cover_PinkBottles wanted the bottles to be easy to find when lost under the crib or car seat. Smart!

Sweet Pea Glass Bottles (9 oz) are $8.95 and Pea Pod Bottle Covers (9 oz) are $7.95. Pea Pod Bottles are also available in 5 oz for $7.95 and Covers for $6.95. Both sizes are at Every Little Bit.

Addicted to Bubbles

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Addicted to BubblesI admit it… I was addicted to bubbles.  I’ve long had the connection that bubbles mean clean.  Like Pavlov’s dog knows that a bell means food, I know that bubbles mean clean…looks like the dog and I were both wrong.  Just like it was not the bell that brought the food, it is not the bubbles that provide the clean.  In the end, it actually looks like the bubbles are working against us.

We have been trained to think that soaps need to bubble.  Bubble baths, suds of dishes, a foaming shampoo…no questions asked, soaps should bubble.  But why?  Sure, the bubbles are pretty, they fill the sink, they feel good in our hair and the kids sure like to play in them, but where do they come from and do we really need them?  Looking into the ingredients of my old favourite bubbling cleaners I find that we are better off being bubble free.

The most common ingredient found in hand soap, dish soap, shampoo, shaving creams and even toothpaste that offer us that irresistible lather is Sodium Lauryl Sulfate (SLS).  However, in higher concentrations, SLS is also used in industrial products, including engine degreasers, floor cleaners, and car wash soaps.  Admittedly, the concentrations in our household products are considerably lower, but it still begs the question, do I want to wash my hair and my car with the same ingredients?  (My car is not that fancy.)

So let’s look at the benefits of SLS.  (more…)

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