We’ve covered very, very brown bananas before but I was reading a Mrs Beeton-style book on home management from the 1930s the other day (as you do), and I saw a reference to using banana skins to clean brown leather shoes.
According to the hefty tome (which also includes chapters on engaging servants, etiquette for women and fortune-telling – all essential to the 1930s homemaker), rubbing the inside of a banana skin on brown leather shoes helps feed the leather. A bit of Googling seems to corroborate this and adds that the same idea can also be applied to silverware.
Any other cunning ways to reuse banana peel?
(We’ve covered orange peel before – that’s got loads of reuses…)
Categories: food, household, items
Posted by louisa
on 1 July 2009
We’ve had an email from Matt asking:
I have bags of unused scraps of upholstery vinyl, I’m trying to find out if these can be recycled and if so how?
At the moment they are just being thrown away but if they can be turned into something else then that’s great!
I suspect Matt is producing these scraps on a commercial scale so needing something more than craft suggestions. However, what might be a scrap to him (because, for example, it can’t be used for an entire seat cover perhaps) might not be a scrap to another person who wants to make smaller things out of them – there are organisations like Scrap Leeds who collect reusable commercial waste and redistribute it to schools, arts projects and crafters. If possible, it might be worth sorting out sizeable scraps while going along.
As for the truly scrap pieces, if they can’t be recycled back into sheets of fabric, it might be possible to shred them for reuse as insulation or stuffing – the hard bit is finding a nearby company who does that. Any suggestions?
Categories: clothes and fabric, items
Posted by louisa
on 29 June 2009
We’ve had an email from Jayne:
What can I do with corn cobs? Seems such a waste to throw them in the bin after we’ve eaten the kernels. Compost?
Yes, they can be composted but since the core is usually pretty tough when the ears reach maturity (sweet corn cob as opposed to baby corn stage), they’ll probably take quite a while to rot down – chop them up to speed up the process but they’re still not going to be the fastest. (Some people get around this sort of problem by keeping two types of compost heap – one for things that will rot quickly, and one for things that will rot slowly. The first will provide regular compost for the garden, the second will produce it eventually too but the main purpose is to keep the first pile clutter-free – and keep other stuff out of landfill of course.)
Apparently they can be shredded and used as fibre in cattle fodder, burned into charcoal and on a large scale, can be used to make a industrial chemical compound.
Any suggestions for things more useful around the home?
Categories: food, household, items
Posted by louisa
on 26 June 2009
We’ve had an email from Jennie:
Can you recycle swim caps?
It’ll depend on what the caps are made from but the answer to actual recycling is probably no. According to Wikipedia, they can be made from latex, silicone or lycra: silicone is recyclable, but not collected widely for recycling while latex and lycra (spandex) aren’t recyclable on a large scale yet.
If they’re still in good, usable condition, the best thing to do would be able pass them on to someone else who can use them for their original purpose – through a charity/thrift shop maybe, or through your local pool.
And what about reuses?
(Photo by coudron)
Categories: hobbies, items, sports
Posted by louisa
on 24 June 2009
Gift bags are great alternative to wrapping paper because it’s a lot easier to reuse them, and amongst everyone I’ve ever spoken to about it, it’s generally accepted that people will reuse them to give similar sized gifts in the future.
But what about when they get a bit tatty to be recirculated again?
I’ve got one – made out of a light card instead of heavy paper – to keep my small, current crochet project out of the preying paws of cats, and I’ve seen big paper ones remade into smaller paper ones – cutting off the tatty edges and refolding it again.
Any other suggestions?
(Photo by lusi)
Categories: Christmas, household, items, packaging, paper & stationery, Valentines
Posted by louisa
on 22 June 2009