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Yankee Magazine's Vinegar, Duct Tape, Milk Jugs & More

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Yankee Magazine's Vinegar, Duct Tape, Milk Jugs & More

From milk jugs to egg cartons to mayonniase and more, your home contains an untapped gold mine of materials that you can use to solve problems, fix what breaks, or create substitutes for things you'd otherwise have to buy. The trick is figuring out what among these objects is treasure and what's trash. That's where Earl Proulx and the editors of Yankee magazine can help.

Drawing on their own creative ideas--and those of ingenious Yankees all over New England--they've come up with more than 1,000 clever ways to put common household objects to uncommon and valuable uses. The result is a book that will benefit you in five clear ways.

1. This book will empower you.
Other people might be stymied when, say, Spot knocks a glass of grape juice on that elegant white rug. Not you. You'll be able to lift that stain yourself--without buying some expensive remover--just by applying a dab of shaving cream. Vinegar, Duct Tape, Milk Jugs, and More contains dozens of clever do-it-yourself ideas like this.

2. This book will save you money.
Need an attractive gift for a friend, a game to entertain the grandkids, a desk organizer for your home office? Forget the catalogs and stay away from the stores. As you'll see, you can make these items and dozens more in minutes from the leftover things around your house.

3. This book will make your life easier.
There's no need to stock a cabinetful of specialty cleansers. Vinegar, Duct Tape, Milk Jugs, and More will show you how to use common ingredients like salt, ketchup, baking soda, flour, yogurt, and, of course, vinegar to handle many of the cleaning tasks you encounter every day.

4. This book will reduce the waste in your home.
If you've ever regretted the amount of trash you throw out each week, here's the solution. This book will show you how to give a second life to everything from plastic containers to bubble wrap to panty house and more.

5. This book will entertain you.
Whether you settle on one of Earl's yarns, the story behind common objects like Post-It Notes and condensed milk, or the "My Way" tips from actual readers, you're bound to enjoy the fun side of this book.

Vinegar, Duct Tape, Milk Jugs, and More provides no-fail ideas for every area of your home, and for many actitivites, from gardening to cooking, from travel to sports, and from crafts to games. Consider it your no-cost tool kit for all your needs around the home.

Throw out a candle stub, some sour milk, that leftover bag of cat litter? Not on your life!

You might think of these things as waste that's headed for the trash can, but there are hundreds of practical ways you can save money, time, and natural resources by reusing these and other common objects around your house. Follow Earl Proulx and the editors of Yankee magazine as they show you how

Make a soothing facial mask from cat litter

Cover up furniture scratches with a dab of iodine

Tun an old teacup, a sandwich bag, and some sugar into an elegant pin cushion

Clean car grease off your hands with olive oil

Unstick a window with the stub of an old candlestick

Clear a clogged showerhead with vinegar

Ant-proof your home with lemon juice

Make an attractive country picture frame from an old six-pane window

End static cling with hair spray

Stop foot blisters with duct tape

Keep bait worms fresh with coffee grounds

Make an earring holder out of window screening

More than 1,000 creative, fun, and ingenious tips

394 pages, Hardcover

First published September 11, 1999

6 people are currently reading
98 people want to read

About the author

Earl Proulx

15 books1 follower
When Earl Proulx died in March 2002 at age 88, he’d written Yankee‘s “Plain Talk” advice column for 22 years.

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5 stars
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39 (36%)
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29 (27%)
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10 (9%)
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Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for ♥ Sandi ❣	.
1,642 reviews70 followers
December 12, 2015
Nice little book all about household hints. Easy read - some good hints, some not so good and some crazy! As stated on the book cover - "From the attic to the basement; From the kitchen to the bath; From the home to the office; From the garden to the garage." Covers it all - plus - recreation, gift giving, sports, hobbies, day trips, travel, weekends, celebrations and pets. And OMG the uses for a gallon milk jug - endless I tell you - endless! Quick effortless read.
Profile Image for Stevie Lacika.
8 reviews
September 11, 2022
Informative book about how to improvise. It reminded me of my childhood years growing up in a poor household and having to make-do with what we had.
However, I will say it is a bit dated and risky, like “kitty litter face mask”… back then it was just clay (maybe), nowadays I wouldn’t dare, too many chemicals are in everything. But to be fair there was a disclaimer in the beginning of the book to advise your own caution.
Take what you will with this review.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Abby Stopka.
588 reviews11 followers
March 9, 2021
A lot of good tips in this book however I would not condone cleaning with ammonia.
Profile Image for Tom Schulte.
3,425 reviews77 followers
July 16, 2023
An impressive set of uses for vinegar and baking soda.... Earl's main message also seems to be throw nothing away and everything has a new use. Entertaining and enlightening, really.
Profile Image for HeavyReader.
2,246 reviews14 followers
January 2, 2012
Unlike the last "helpful" household tips books I read (1,628 Country Shortcuts: From 1,628 Country People), this one is actually good and, yes, helpful. It even has an index, which makes me really happy. With an index, I can actually find a solution when I need one.

Also helpful is a ten page list at the front of the book of the author's "very best out-of-the-ordinary uses for ordinary items around the house. So if you want to know what to do with old jeans or powdered milk or soda bottles, just consult the list for ideas.

The tip I like best so far is the suggestion to use a game board from a no longer played board game as a lap desk. I have access to an old Scrabble board that I plan to cover in clear contact paper (as soon as I find some cheap clear contact paper at the thrift store). Once it's covered, it will be easy to wipe glue off. (The clear contact paper idea is mine and not from the book.)

This book also has some of the weirdest household ideas I've ever encountered. Here are three examples:

1) To keep chemicals from a home perm from dripping into eyes and ears and onto neck, "dig out some sanitary minipads that have an adhesive backing. After your hair is up in the bonnet or on the pins and curlers, and before anyone applies anything liquid, attach the minipads sticky side down to the forehead, temples, and back of your neck...."

The picture in my head of some frugal old lady sitting around with panty liners stuck to her neck and face just cracks me up!

2) If you want a glass of water on the nightstand but don't want to knock it over, use a shoe. "A low-top tennis shoe or a lady's flat shoe with fairly rigid sides will work well. Just polish or machine-wash it, then cut a shoe liner-size scrap of towel to fit inside...Choose a glass that the shoe will hold snugly but that will come out easily. If you like, hot-glue buttons, shells, or beads to the shoe in a decorative pattern that matches your bedroom decor."

I could not stop laughing when I read that tip. The idea that someone who would stick a glass of water into an old shoe and still think they have bedroom "decor" cracks me up. And as if hot gluing buttons or shells to the old shoe would somehow dress it up...that's hilarious. I am all about reusing, but this idea seems very odd, even to me.

Ok, here's the worse household hint I have ever heard...

3) "Here's a perfect plant stand for the corner of your living room or family room: an old commode chair. Just choose a ceramic pot...that fits in the hole in the chair seat. Plant your greenery in the pot and slide the pot into place."

I think that's just going to far. Imagining having (dead) Granny's potty chair stuck in the corner of the living room is pretty much horrifying to me. I'm a frugal gal, I don't like things to end up in the landfill, but I bet I could figure out better things to do with an old commode chair (like giving it to another person with mobility problems who could put it to the use for which it is intended) then to have it stuck in the room where the family hangs out. Plant or no plant, this is just too much! What was the author thinking?!

I am skipping around reading this book, but i can already tell that I like it. It's got good ideas and hilarious ones too. Perfect!
Profile Image for Sarah.
11 reviews1 follower
November 26, 2007
This book is great, it is full of great suggestions on how to make fun things, and all those things listed above. Clean things. Also gives great ideas on how to reuse things normally just tossed away. I made a bird feeder out of a milk-jug and the birds love it! The kids love watching the birds come and eat.
Profile Image for Sarah.
92 reviews
July 28, 2011
Good idea book with new suggestions for old items you already have. Great for people who want to learn to use or recycle items in new ways. Some of the ideas I already knew. All in all a good book. Worth owning if you want to use items instead of throwing them out to end up in the landfill.
Profile Image for Pam.
658 reviews20 followers
January 11, 2012
OK, first of all, this is not a good book to give to a hoarder. The author saves every can, bottle, egg carton and milk jug he ever purchased. I can't really say that I will do anything suggested but I was amused when he said if you don't have an ice scraper you can use your library card:)
145 reviews3 followers
July 11, 2016
This is kinda like the dictionary for those of us who look up a word and keep on reading..... I needed some information on cleaning a shower stall without using chemicals and BAM! There it was, plus so much more! Dawdled my way through the whole book. The shower still isn't cleaned tho....
Profile Image for Melvie.
93 reviews6 followers
July 9, 2010
Meh. Well, this book was published in 1985 or so; I already knew about a lot of the tips and tricks.
Profile Image for Kelly Knapp.
948 reviews20 followers
November 14, 2012
Repurposing is all the rage, and reducing our carbon footprint is optimal. This book was doing both before it was "the thing" let alone " the rage."
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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