minnieandme
<font color=deeppink>You can never have too much <
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2003
- Messages
- 7,667
I brought my own breakfast to work this morning. I bring my lunch as well, so I don't spend anything.
You guys are just so inspiring! I decided to poke around the web for frugal living tips and I came across the idea of line drying our laundry...OK, I know, this is SO not a new concept for a lot of people - it just had never occurred to meAside from air drying sweaters and hand-washables I throw everything into the dryer. So I plan to give it a shot with the next round of laundry - our basement already has clotheslines strung from the ceiling, so I just need to gather some hangers and clothespins. Any tips? I read to hang t-shirts upside down so you don't get clothespin marks where you can see them, and that dress shirts and blouses can go right on hangers. I've honestly never line dried before so any other technical tips would be appreciated! (I feel like such a loser)
I've also made it a full week on my spending 'fast' that I put myself on. I decided to only buy groceries at least until month end. I'll renew my goal once I make it to the end of January. I'm hoping it just becomes a new habit!
I do this too! I have a chart taped to the pantry door on the inside that has the budget amount for each category and just subtract everytime I buy something. That way I know at a glance if I can go to Macaroni Grill or Rosies on the weekend!![]()
I used to line dry almost everything until it was "almost dry" and then throw it in the dryer to finish it off and fluff it a bit. Can't do it any more because I've got no place to dry them. (no basement) These days 80% of my laundry is dry flat or line dry, and I do have a sweater drying rack and a fold up laundry rack, but I toos jeans and other dryables into the dryer. My dryer is gas and auto senses when things are dry, so no waste and it's pretty inexpensive to get things dry.
Anne
If you hang shirts on padded hangers you won't have the creases at the shoulder.
For me that also means I can carry the hanging stuff upstairs where goes on the shower pole and adds humidity to the living areas. (T shirts, underwear, socks get dried downstairs on the drying rack.)
I got a dozen padded hangers at garage sales and use them to hang my "good stuff" to air dry,
I learned this trick fom a cloth diaper web site, not sure which one).
I love the idea of this chart! I currently have a notebook that I carry with me but I like the idea of taping it on the inside of the pantry door. Thanks!
I keep up with ours in an Excel spreadsheet so I see what I spend each day and then it automatically subtracts so I can see what is left in my budget.
Now for the cell phone I hardly ever use...my contract is up in April. I pay $40/month and seriously only use about 15 minutes a month. I must switch to pre-paid.