Lots of Options

The children and I have been practicing our behavior in public around here.  We practice at home first, talk about it in the car and then try it out where people can see us.  I don’t know about the kids, but I’m controlling myself a lot better :). 

Anyway, it’s a great excuse to hit garage sales, the flea market, and the fabric shop…

I found a gorgeous white table cloth at the flea market this week for just $3!  I bought it home and tried it out in the ring clips for my laundry room curtain.

It’s a nice option, though I think I prefer the canvas.  I’m considering using this table cloth as the top of a duvet cover for one of my daughter’s beds.  Now to only find a second white table cloth similar in size for the other bed.  They wouldn’t have to match perfectly. 

I decided against hand crocheting wide trim for the canvas curtain.  I started it and soon realized the time commitment just to get a working pattern like I wanted.    Just the thought was stressing me out.  No need for that!  And I found this fantastic site that carries yards and yards of Venice lace for far below retail cost. 

I settled on this 7.5 inch piece with just the amount of drip that I was hoping for: 
I bought a second narrower piece for a little secret project I’ll tell you about later.

Coming Clean

I caved, I bought paper plates. I did it awhile ago and have always meant to tell you…

The worse part is the first box of paper plates were stuck together. So we used 2 at a time thinking it was only 1 and went through them quickly. (After I found out my first thought was all that wasted money.  Sad, I know.)  The second box is better and should last us a month. I decided the $8 for 420 plates from Coscto was worth the sanity.   Because even with the paper plates, after a little cooking, I have this:

And the task of dealing with that with such a stubby faucet and a bathtub with the shower stuck on permanently was enough for me.  It feels so silly after seeing the missionary pictures from the Phillipines on Sunday.   I have it so much better even in my construction mess.

On the bright side, paper plates are kind of useful.  Cut them in half for a dustpan.  I lost my funnel in a packing box somewhere and a paper plate came in handy for refilling my salt shaker :).

A few Garage Sale Signs

The children and I went garage saling last Wednesday and snapped a few pictures of some signs.  I want to show you how simple it can be to have a winning sale.  And how complicated it can be to mess it up :).

I could see this sign from several blocks away and knew which lane to be in to make the correct turn.  I didn’t have to scan through a bunch of  information. All of the signs for this sale, looked like this so it was easy for me to find the location.

Still a simple sign, but the outline on the arrow makes it even easier to see.  The balloons caught my eye and every sign for this sale also matched down to the color of the balloons. I knew when I found it!

Now look at this sign.  It is full of information too small and illegible to read even up close!  When I got out of the car to take a photo, I saw that the arrows point both directions.  Depending on which direction you are driving, you would turn down the wrong street.  When we finally found the sale, there were no prices on anything.  We found several things we would have liked to buy, but there was no person sitting at the sale.  Even though we shopped for a while and weren’t very quiet about it, no one ever came out.  We left.  A week later the sign is still there rotting in the rain.  It doesn’t have to be this hard.

Here are some tips for having a winning sale that I sent to my newsletter a few weeks ago.  I think they are worth printing again:

1.  Invite a friend or 2 to join you.  The more stuff you have the more people will stop.  It’s also handy to have someone to take turns watching the sale for bathroom breaks, childcare breaks, and meal preparations.

2.  The #1 garage sale day of the week is Wednesday.  The #2 day is Saturday.  If you can’t be open 4 days (Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday) then pick at least one of the big days to be open.

3.  Get as many tables and clothing racks as possible.  In a pinch you can lay a door over 2 saw horses to use as a table.  You can make an inexpensive rack from PVC pipe.  Borrow tables from family, friends, neighbors or your church.

4.  Take the time to clean your items.  A little bit of elbow grease will insure you get a better price.  Dirty items have a good chance of staying put no matter how cheaply they are priced.

5.  Do price every item, or have a flat rate for certain things that are clearly labeled.  “All clothes $.50” for example.  “Make offer” sales frustrate the buyer because they have to stop and ask about every item and are embarrassed to offend you by offering too low.  Most people walk away from a sale like this.

Tip:  Cut squares off masking tape rolls and stick them to cookie sheets to make price tags.

6.  If more than one person is in the sale, use a 2 initial code for each person and then keep a spiral notebook with a page for each person in the sale.  Masking tape tabs on the pages will help you flip to the page quickly.  Leave the first few pages in the notebook blank for writing daily totals, and when the sale isn’t busy you can transfer each person’s earnings to their page.

7.    Try to organize your sale as well as possible.  Put housewares together, office supplies together, group clothing by size and season.  We had limited time to do this before the sale opened, but I walked around moving items as things sold until the sale was well organized.  Every time a sold item made an empty spot, I shifted items to fill the spot.  This spread things out so each item could be seen and kept our sale looking huge even though more than half the original items were gone.

Tip:  Move especially appealing items, like a beautiful dress or a super cute swim suit, to a front spot that can be seen from the road.  Keep tools and other “man” type items in prominent places too.  Men can be some of your biggest customers but most will only shop a few minutes.

8.  If the weather is sunny, pull tables and items into the driveway.  The more stuff that can be seen from the road the more likely people will stop instead of driving by slowly and moving on.

9.  If you a person driving by slowly, wave a friendly hello.  They feel noticed and are more likely to stop and look around now that they realize they’ve been seen.

10.  Signs are very important!  The simpler and easier to be seen the better.  High contrast black writing on white signs is perfect.  “Write Yard Sale” or “Garage sale” with a large black arrow in huge thick letters.  Cover it with plastic to protect from the elements.  Be sure you have a sign at every turn and periodically check through the day to make sure your signs are still there.  Good manners require that you remove signs at the end of the day and put them out again when the sale reopens.

Tip:  Don’t forget the sign in the yard.  You don’t want anyone to think that you are moving or just cleaning out the garage J.

11.  Advertising your sale on Craigslist is free, easy to do, and will bring extra traffic.  Especially do this if you have large or specialty items.  Posting photos of your key items and setup will help encourage people to make the trip.

12.  For safety, wear your money in a fanny pack, and start the sale with plenty of ones and quarters to make change.  Periodically take large amounts of money into the house in a safe place.  If someone robs you, calmly hand over the pouch.  It will only be a part of your earnings from the sale.

13.  Don’t price items too high.  Good jeans with no holes are worth $1 or $2.  Most kid’s clothes move best at $.50 an item.  If you have a lot of name brand great quality items, you should try to sell them at a consignment store like Children’s Orchard first.  Pricing things right will earn you a great reputation and get people coming back year after year. On the other hand a friend of ours in the sale had a lot of new looking purses priced at $.25 each.  I could have easily gotten a dollar each for them.  When in doubt, get a second opinion from a garage sale buddy.  If several people look at the item and put it back you can bet the price is too high.  It’s fine to walk around and mark your items down while the sale is going.

Tip:  I love buying clothes at garage sales.  When we can’t wear them anymore I sell them for the same price I paid for them and use the money to buy at garage sales again.  Contrast that with buying clothes new and then selling them at a garage sale taking the money and buying new again.  The loss is substantial.

I see having a garage sale as a ministry.  We could just take our items to a thrift store where they will bump the price up 6-10 times the garage sale value.  (The proceeds usually go to a worthy cause.)   Or we can offer our items at low prices for a few days and give people a chance to really save while we recoup some money to help our families.  After the sale take what’s left to the thrift store and donate to help them raise funds for their worthy cause.  It’s a win-win situation.

A question I’m often asked is:  Do you save items from a garage sale for a future sale?  I used to and often the items did sell at a later date.   Recently I’ve felt the joy of decluttering!  The thought of taking any of those things back home was terrible.  It felt really good to donate them to a worthy cause.

Laundry Room Door Curtain

Isn’t it fun when frugal, functional, and beautiful all align?

Before

Our laundry closet used to have a bi-fold door on it. It was dated looking and dangerously easy to pull out of it’s track. When the door was open, I couldn’t get to my cupboards. And it was a pain to open and close every time I wanted to switch my laundry. We talked about custom making some glassed French doors to fit the opening, but it was going to be expensive and time consuming.

During

Finding inspiration in Home and Harmony’s sink curtain I bought a 6 foot by 9 foot painting drop cloth at Home Depot for $10. Later at Lowe’s, I grabbed a set of 14–1/2 inch diameter ring clips for $5, a 1/2 inch diamter metal conduit pipe for $1.32, and 2 screw in hooks for $1.18 each.

Although I can sew, I decided not too. I just folded over the top of the tarp until the curtain was the length I wanted. Then cheered DH on while he screwed in the hooks, and snapped it all together. The screws are super deep–3 inches into the studs, and the conduit is really strong. I think the kids could do chin ups on the bar and not pull it down.  The best part is how easy it slides!

I’d like to put some lace trim on the flap. It’s just pinned on right now. I have perfect gorgeous, dripping, Valencia lace in my scrap bag, but it’s too short a piece.

I could copy the look affordably with Irish Crochet. But I would have to design my own pattern and then stitch it myself and I’m wondering if it’s worth it? I also have this piece of lace in my scrap bag, that is long enough.

I was really hoping for some serious dripping lace, but this is already made and ready to go. What do you think? Custom Irish crochet? Or already made but not as awesome?

It only matters when the light is on behind the curtain. The ready made lace isn’t heavy enough to combat the back lighting.

But how often will I keep the room backlit when I’m not in there?

I love how the curtain color harmonizes with my new light fixture.

If you were to use the ready made lace, would you trim off the web background or leave it on for character?

A Kitchen Bench

I found a new to me blog that I’m crazy about.    It’s called Home and Harmony and it’s about a mother with 6 children, who homeschools and decorates and sings :). Click on her family photo to go there:

She is what I would like to be someday. 
She posted photos about her dining room (and brand new pictures of her laundry room which you have to go see.)

I have a lot of people to sit in a tiny area and when I saw her photo, I fell in love with her bench.  You see it has a soft back that can be pushed up against the window and no one will feel the lumps from the window sill.  And since it is a bench, you can squish several little bodies on it.

I told my mom all about it and showed her pictures and spent the afternoon with her searching the internet for such a thing, but found nothing.  My mom kept my 3 oldest children last night for a sleepover and took them garage saling this morning.  She called me from a garage sale and said they had a bench there for $5 that fit my measurements, but she wasn’t sure if I would want it.  It was $5 so I told her to buy it.

She said, “Are you sure?  I don’t know if you’ll like it.”  For $5 I’ll risk it.  This is what she brought me:

I love it!

A little organization for the laundry room

My cousin, Eric, is coming over tonight to lay new tile in my laundry room.  I’m so excited!  I use the term laundry room loosely, as ours is just a 3 x 10 foot closet.    When we move If we move, I will look for a laundry room that has folding and sorting space.  For now I am grateful that it is on the main floor.  Anyway, my laundry room has always been a mess.

I didn’t think it mattered that the top of the cupboared was all junky or that the shelves were shoved full of stuff I never used. 

After we started our house remodel and have been living in chaos for 6 weeks and counting, I realized that environment affects me.  I’m cranky; I can’t think, the children are running around crazy; and It’s getting harder to be productive.  I’ve decided while I can, to take every little nook and cranny of my home and make it better.

I’m not an interior designer (in case you were confused, bwahahaha) and I know what I do won’t be perfect.  I’m okay with that.

The first thing I did was take everything out of the cupboards and wash them down.  Then I thought about what I really used.  I set those items aside and got rid of the rest.  Some I was able to find new homes for where they would be loved and cherished.  Some were worth trashing and other things hit the garage sale pile. 

While I was decluttering I also removed a shelf from each cabinet.  With 3 shelves, they were too short to be of much use.  The strong boards are going to be perfect for towel storage in another room.

Then I took a vinyl table cloth that I loved and cut it up as shelf liner.  I used elmer’s spray adhesive to adhere the vinyl and wrapped it all the way around the shelf.  This allows me to flip the shelf over and hides all of the original brown.  I love the pale yellow with white polka dots.  It’s so cheerful!  And I love that I can wipe it down when I need to.  My first plan was to use wallpaper, but that was waaaay to expensive.  My next idea was to use fabric with decopauge and sealer to make it washable.  That was going to be a LOT of work.  My genious mother thought of the table cloth.  Mine was on my table (convenient) but a new one is just $5.

The cabinet doors were too dark and heavy feeling.  I thought about washing the cabinets in a pale aqua blue, but I wasn’t sure I would love it and I’m  tired of painting!  So I took the doors off and used glue dots to stick a lovely daisy lace trim around the door frame.  The lace hid the router holes from the old hinges.  Update:  The glue dots didn’t hold.  I ended up using spray glue for the lace too.

There are cabinets on each end of the room.  One over the washer and one over the dryer.  The washer side will stay open. And I’ve sewn a cute little yellow and tiny dot curtain for the other side from the fabric I had orginally cut for shelf liner.  I’m going to find a tension rod today so I can show it to you.  (I’m not loving the curtain look in here.  Maybe it’s not full enough, or not long enough, or just too bright a fabric.  How would you fix it if it were you?)

I invested $25 in a huge new basket ($4–price slashed because the cover was damaged, but I can sew!) for our BBQ tools that will sit on top of the dryer cabinet; $5 each for 3 gallon size glass penny candy jars for baking soda, borax, and oxygen bleach, and $5 for a lime green tea jar for liquid laundry soap. 

I also used the leftover beadboard wall-paper from the girls’ room to wall-paper the entire room and the backs of the cabinets.  It makes me so happy whenI look in there from the other room.  I plan to leave off the doors to the laundry closet and sew a curtain instead that matches the blinds I hope to make for the kitchen.

Here’s an after photo, more pictures to come:

Use Your Slow Cooker and Save

Save time, money, and energy by using your slow cooker.  I have always loved the idea of the slow cooker.  Put the ingredients in early in the morning and serve it up at dinner time.  It’s easy and doesn’t heat up the kitchen.  But most of the slow cooker recipes I have found include ingredients I see as junk food.  I’m talking about cream of mushroom soup, processed cheese, and commercial seasoning mixes.  I have spent the last two years developing and tweaking 31 slow-cooker recipes that can be made from all natural foods, whole grains, and require a minimum of prep time.  For the most part you won’t have to precook pasta or pre-soak dry beans and the results will still be fabulous. 

Here’s a list of the recipes included in the e-book:

  Lazy Day Lasagna, Chalupa, Spinach Chicken Alfredo, Teriyaki Pork Chops and Brown Rice, Speedy Spaghetti, Pigs in a Blanket, Marvelous Meatballs, Melt in your mouth beef sandwiches, Chock full of veggies meatloaf, Creamy chicken and rice, Beef Topped Bean Enchiladas, Beef and Barley Stew, Pulled Pork Sandwiches, Twice Baked Potatoes, Savory Baked Chicken, Rojo De Pollo Enchiladas, Cheesy Ham and Potato Bake, Beef Pot Pie, Easy Oil Pie Crust, Frittata, Beef and Bean Chili, Sunday Afternoon Pot Roast, Hearty Burritos, Smoked Sausage Beans and Rice, Beef Stroganoff, Lemon Chicken Sandwiches, Tuna Casserole, Shepherds Pie, Upside Down Quiche, Stuffed Peppers, Baked BBQ chicken, and Southwest Lasagna.

You will also get a list of slow cooker tips to help you make the most of natural cooking in the slow cooker.  And most recipes feature a full color photo with serving ideas. 

In addition, I carefully placed the order of the recipes in the book, so that if you cook them in order, you can use leftovers from one night to make the next night’s meal go faster.  For example, leftover chicken from Savory Baked Chicken is used to make Rojo De Pollo Enchiladas the next night.  And chicken broth from Lemon Chicken Sandwiches is used to make Tuna Casserole the next night.

If you choose to, you can follow the recipes in the e-book in order and have your entire month’s menu in the crock-pot!  The best part is, the book is only $3.00, will be instantly emailed to you,  and your purchase helps keep the Grocery Shrink going.

$3.00

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Here are some photos to tempt you :).

Click here to  purchase your book here and it will be instantly emailed to you!

Saving Money with Menu Planning Basics

Menu planning keeps me out of trouble.  It guides my shopping, makes sure I use up what's on hand, and thinks for me when I'm too stressed to think. And saves a bunch of money by keeping us out of restaurants and minimizes grocery store runs.   Here's a basic step by step guide to menu planning.

1.  Print off a blank calendar for the month you are working on.  You can download June 2010 through May 2011 Calendars here and just print the one you need:  Download June 10 May 11 Menu Sheets

2.  Go peek in your fridge, freezer, and pantry shelves.  What do you already have to prepare meals from.  Plan the first few meals from only pantry ingredients so if you can't go to the store right away you can still follow your plan.

Open_refrigerator

2.  Gather your grocery sales flyers and see what's on sale.  Use what you know about regular prices and sale prices to discern a good deal.  Just because it's in the ad, doesn't make it a bargain!  The best deals are usually on the front and back cover.  On notebook paper, write down the name of the store and the item that you are interested in.  You can menu plan with these items, or plan to purchase and store them for later use.

3.  Write commitments in small letters at the bottom of the day square that will affect your ability to cook.  Plan a slow cooker meal or other simple dish for that night.

Slow-cooker

4.  Grab your favorite recipe books and cooking magazines for inspiration.  Fill in main dishes on your menu plan as you think of them.  Try to vary your recipes.  For example don't plan lasagna and spaghetti right next to each other.  Make like recipes at least a week apart.  Try not to plan a pasta dish for every day of the week.  Give yourself a variety.

5.  Make sure each meal has a protein, starch, and 2-3 vegetables or fruit.  The side dishes can be as simple as a tossed salad, warmed up bag of frozen peas, or a carton of cottage cheese.

6.  As you meal plan, if you think of an ingredient necessary to a planned dish that isn't on hand, write it on the back of your menu.

7.  When you're finished stick your menu to your fridge and check it every morning and evening so you can remember to take out items to thaw or to put a dish in the slow cooker in the morning.

Progress on the Kitchen Floor

 

Darren was up until 2 in the morning this morning making progress on the floor.  I kind of like the look of the black underlayment with the white stripes minus the sheetrock footprints.  I wonder how it would hold up with polyurethane?  I guess it doesn't matter since we already bought the hardwood.

Wood floor 001

Since neither of us have ever done anything like this, He used Youtube extensively for learning and also called an experienced friend many times.

Wood floor 009

He finally took a deep breath and started nailing.

Wood floor 010

I love it!  We decided we'd better tile the laundry closet instead of put wood in there.  I'm terrible about letting appliances leak everywhere.   Tomorrow I will paint this half of the room to match.  I can't wait to see it with all the green gone.

 

Wood floor 005

Hand Sanitizer for Ink and Paint Stain Removal

I made this rag quilt for my oldest son's toddler bed, and was sad to find a huge blue marker stain on it several years ago.  I tried hairspray on the stain, which only seemed to spread the blue around and not remove any large quantity of it. 

Tooth fairy tuna lasagna 007

It has been in my stain removal bucket for years and I finally decided to throw it out.  My mom stopped me and suggested I try hand sanitizer.

Hand sanitizer is mostly alchohol, like hairspray, which is it's stain removing ingredient.  Unlike hairspray hand sanitizer is a gel and stays in the stained area to deeply penetrate and remove.  Since I had left the stain so long and probably washed and dried it, it didn't come out completely, but it is enough improved that it will work for an outdoor blanket.

Tooth fairy tuna lasagna 014

The bonus:  while I was working on the quilt all the paint stains on my hands came off, grin.