For me, it all started with my burning desire to hire a midwife to assist me in a natural birth.
Once I did that, I slowly started becoming more aware of the little areas in life where some changes could be made.
Cloth diapers, organic foods, cleaning supplies, body care/toiletries.
And let me tell you, these changes are some of the most rewarding tasks I've set out on.
Now everything I look at is through the filter of how can I take care of this without any chemicals, or rather how can I take care of this using only the things God made, not the things man tweaked.
The hardest BY FAR has been cleaning supplies. I'm just now really getting in to that one. But it's hard to come to grips with the fact that *Clean doesn't have to smell like something. Clean smells like nothing.* I love me some scented cleaning supplies. But then I turn the bottle and look at the ingredients and see all sorts of warnings about skin contact and eye irritation and DO NOT, WHATEVER YOU DO, INGEST THIS, and I think wait a second. If these things are dangerous to our bodies, why am I cleaning with them? I know I can use lemon and lavender (etc) essential oils to give the house a "clean scent," but it's just hard to let go of that Clorox Green Works.
Anyway, bottom line is that I stand beside each of my decisions regarding the care of my house, family, and our bodies--convinced that they are the choices God has led me to, and that they are right. That doesn't mean that I expect everyone to come to the same choices (though I would certainly love to see that kind of revolution).
Details later, maybe?
But for now I am quite certain that given the chance, I could conquer the world with coconut oil and baking soda.
Showing posts with label Go Green. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Go Green. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Felted wool dryer balls
A few months ago my mom asked me what kind of fabric softener I used, because she had just found a tutorial for making fabric-softener-like wool balls (you'll see). I proceeded to boast in the fact that I didn't need fabric softener. Rarely did our clothes wrinkle, and there was never a problem with static.
Don't speak so proudly unless you're prepared for Murphy's Law to come punch you in the face.
It wasn't 2 days later that the static electricity in our clothes was so bad that the hairs on my arms would stand up straight as I attempted to fold laundry.
I really don't want to use fabric softener (liquid or sheets). Liquid because I don't want any residue in the washer (it'll coat the fibers of the cloth diapers and cause them to hold undesirable scents) and sheets because those tend to create a waxy buildup in the lint trap of the dryer, reducing its effectiveness, and there are chemicals in it and I'm really trying to go as chemical-free in this house as possible.
So I talked to mom about what she did and I found this cool little tutorial (very similar to what she described).
Here's how it looked for me:
So the run-down of how it works is that the wool soaks in most of the moisture from your load of clothes and evenly disperses it throughout the dryer, so it stays more humid throughout the dryer during the drying time, reducing the potential for static electricity. And I've noticed that I can have the heat setting on medium instead of high, and my clothes still dry faster than before, with no wrinkling.
I'm not sure if these are going to last as long as the ones in the original tutorial. She said they can last up to 5 years. I think I forgot to put my washing machine on the hot setting when I washed them, so that could be the reason. But so far, 12 loads in and they're doing great!
What I spent: $3
1) wool jacket from the closet: $0
2) yarn from Hobby Lobby with 40% off coupon: $3
3) roving from my mom (she gave me her extra): $0
Don't speak so proudly unless you're prepared for Murphy's Law to come punch you in the face.
It wasn't 2 days later that the static electricity in our clothes was so bad that the hairs on my arms would stand up straight as I attempted to fold laundry.
I really don't want to use fabric softener (liquid or sheets). Liquid because I don't want any residue in the washer (it'll coat the fibers of the cloth diapers and cause them to hold undesirable scents) and sheets because those tend to create a waxy buildup in the lint trap of the dryer, reducing its effectiveness, and there are chemicals in it and I'm really trying to go as chemical-free in this house as possible.
So I talked to mom about what she did and I found this cool little tutorial (very similar to what she described).
Here's how it looked for me:
An old, unlined, uncomfortably scratchy, oddly fitting wool jacket that I bought for $5 a few years ago and may have worn twice. A scane (sp?) of 100% wool yarn, and wool roving.
Cut the fabric into strips and begin to form a ball out of it.
Tightly wrap the yarn around the wool ball.
And then the roving around the yarn. A word to perfectionists: it may not really resemble a perfect ball shape yet. I had a hard time with this because I desperately wanted to make it perfect, but it's nearly impossible to. But no fear...
You then stuff the balls into a pantyhose leg. Tie each one separately and tightly. Then run them through a hot cycle in the washing machine and dry them completely. This is the how the wool felts. After they came out of the dryer, I cut mine out of the pantyhose and decided to re-stuff them into another pantyhose leg and repeat the washing/drying step. Then after they came out of the dryer the 2nd time, they were felted and beautiful.
That's it! They're ready to go. Just pop them in the dryer for each load of clothes. I forgot to take an after picture right when I completed the project, so this one's from about a dozen dryer loads of use.
So the run-down of how it works is that the wool soaks in most of the moisture from your load of clothes and evenly disperses it throughout the dryer, so it stays more humid throughout the dryer during the drying time, reducing the potential for static electricity. And I've noticed that I can have the heat setting on medium instead of high, and my clothes still dry faster than before, with no wrinkling.
I'm not sure if these are going to last as long as the ones in the original tutorial. She said they can last up to 5 years. I think I forgot to put my washing machine on the hot setting when I washed them, so that could be the reason. But so far, 12 loads in and they're doing great!
What I spent: $3
1) wool jacket from the closet: $0
2) yarn from Hobby Lobby with 40% off coupon: $3
3) roving from my mom (she gave me her extra): $0
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