Tag Archives: thrifty home keeping

Sage’s Sewing Space – Bounty of Buttons

I suppose most homemakers don’t have the amount of buttons I have – accumulated through inheritance and every other avenue possible.  For quite some time, my buttons were kept in the giant glass salad dressing jar that held my mother’s buttons.  It held a respectable amount of buttons – all akimbo! 

buttons

My mother felt this was a good system, even though it required a tedious hunting and pecking effort to locate a single button, let alone several matching buttons.  I, however, am not my mother.  And I confess to being a tad, OK, a LOT more needy of organization than she was.  While I won’t go so far as to say my “buttons were being pushed”  – I admit to feeling anxious about them. 

I was compelled to troll Pinterest in search of ideas.  Alas, nothing was presented that would organize the gigantic amount and variety of buttons I had.  The ideas ranged from spice racks to customized shelving.  My penury nature resisted the idea of spending any money whatsoever. 

buttons 1
buttons 2
buttons 3

Garage sales had yielded a bonanza of canning jars the previous summer – and I had my answer.  By sorting the buttons into cute 4 oz. “quilted” jelly jars, I had my favorite things all at once.  Organization – and  thrift.  For someone like me – this is organizing ecstasy.  And since I have a large amount of white and off white buttons, those are divided by size as well.  This solved all at once the huge amount of buttons, which was even greater than my mother’s had been.  And they are easy to locate by color – without labeling.  I love labeling as much as the next “organ-ista” but if I can avoid labels,  I do, because to my way of thinking  –  it’s one less thing to spend money on.    And – these jelly jars are readily available – should I need more (yikes!) or if one should break.  I realize not everyone has this amount of buttons – but this will also work well with large beads and sequins!  I do some sequin work when I make a costume or an evening gown – and they are difficult to store.  They are so light in weight – and easily scatter all over the place.  With the sequins in the jelly jars, I can just dip my beading needle into the jar, and come out with a sequin.  Very smooth!

sequins

In this image you can only see the multi-colored sequins, but in other jars are iridescent, solid  black,  and solid white sequins, as well as specialty sequins shaped like stars and snowflakes.  I do not however – use these jars to store beads – that is another topic entirely. 

basket 1

The next question was – where to put the twenty jelly jars so they would be largely out of the way, but still easily accessible?  A trip to the attic revealed a dusty, black wire, two tiered fruit basket.  I already have a combination wrought iron banana hangar with a fruit basket underneath – so the one from the attic was just taking up space.  Viola!  While the proportions in the picture are deceptive in size, I assure you that there are twenty jelly jars in that fruit basket.  The height of the total basket is 17.5″ and the diameter of the large and deep bottom basket is 13.5.”  More than enough space and easy to see.  This whole thing is set on top of my grandmother’s extremely heavy wrought iron plant stand – which at this time I do not use for plants.  Since buttons are not looked at as often as my other sewing notions – this arrangement keeps them out of they way in my work area, and makes a decorative display for the sewing space.  The faceted “quilting” on the jelly jars makes beautiful buttons even more lovely.  Dusting is easily accomplished with some kind of duster with a handle on it – like a Swiffer or one with lamb’s wool.  

basket 2

It is evident to me, from nature, that our God, is a God of order.  He makes things beautiful and orderly.  What a nice way to emulate our Creator!  Living with order can create harmony and a sense of calmness in our homes.  He is never careless with His creation – we should never be careless with what  He has given us. 

Psalm 40:5

Many, O Lord my God, are Thy wonderful works which Thou hast done, and Thy thoughts which are to us-ward: they cannot be reckoned up in order unto Thee: if I would declare and speak of them, they are more than can be numbered.

Crock Pot Coveting

How, you say.  How could anyone covet something as mundane as a Crock Pot?  Well, when you already own several working Crocks you don’t need another one.  Or do you?  This new Crock takes crockery cooking to the sublime level – and I don’t mind sharing with our readers, that I have already let the interested parties know what they can gift me with should they so desire. . .

smart technology cooker

Oh my – this is right up there with my new sewing machine that I saved and saved for.  You program in what kind of food you are cooking, and when you want it done,  it does the rest.  Gives me goosebumps!

This description comes from the Crock Pot website:

Details & Features

The Crock-Pot® Slow Cooker featuring Smart Cook™ Technology is the ultimate in convenience and style. No longer feel restricted to what days you use your slow cooker or what cook times fit your lifestyle. The Smart Cook™ Technology allows you to select your “Ready At” time and your protein type and then it does all the thinking for you. Food will cook to the optimal temperature to be ready when you want it to be. Recipes that normally call for 6-8 hours can be extended for up to 12 hours, while recipes with 10-12 hour recommendations can be shortened to 6 hours. This slow cooker’s modern design is evident with a polished, stainless steel exterior and stylish metal handles with a silicone wrap. Manual controls include Low, High, and Warm cook settings to adapt to more delicate recipes that require shorter cooking times. When the “Ready At” time has arrived, this slow cooker automatically shifts over to a convenient keep-warm mode. The cooking indicator and keep warm indicator lights offer at-a-glance convenience. Serving your dish is effortless. The 6.5-quart, removable stoneware provides a smooth transition from countertop to tabletop; no other dishes necessary. Plus, the stoneware and glass lid are dishwasher-safe, making clean up quick and easy.

Features:

  • Smart Cook™ Technology allows you to select your “Ready At” time and your protein type allowing the slow cooker to do the rest of the work for you
  • 6-8 hour recipes can be extended for up to 12 hours & 10-12 hour recipes can be shortened to 6 hours
  • Slow cooker automatically shifts to convenient keep-warm mode when cooking is complete
  • 6.5 quart capacity, serves 7+ people
  • At-a-glance cooking and keep warm indicator lights included
  • BONUS: Cookbook with over 25 delicious recipes specific for this slow cooker.
  • Polished stainless steel exterior
  • Stylish metal handles with silicone wrap
  • Removable oval stoneware
  • Dishwasher-safe stoneware and glass lid

Please don’t think we get any kind of remuneration for featuring this – I just try however I can to help home school moms in their challenging mission to do it all and not crumble under the stress.  Crockery cooking is one of the best ways to accomplish everything, save money, and reduce stress all around.  The newer crocks have a “keep warm” feature, that stops the cooking process, but will enable any late arrivals at your house for dinner (like husbands that work overtime, or teens that have part-time jobs) to have a really great, hot meal,  rather than microwaved leftovers.  And lets face it – sometimes we are too tired to cook up a fabulous dinner in the late afternoon or early evening after a full day of home schooling and home keeping.  If dinner is already made – you’ve got it made! 

EASY CROCK POT PORK CHOPS

I frequently buy huge packages of pork chops on sale at SAM’s Club.  I repackage it when I get home, putting about 7 chops in each package.  Very often, the packages of chops are so huge – that I can make each of these recipes twice from the one huge purchase.  Uber thrifty!

One of the packs gets breaded and pan fried with this coating:

  • 1/3 cup cornmeal
  • 1/3 cup rye flour
  • 1/3 cup raw wheat germ
  • 1 teaspoon kosher or sea salt

Mix a couple of eggs with a small amount of milk, dipping each chop into batter and then into wheat germ breading mixture.  Fry until no longer pink inside. 

With one of the packs of chops, I remove any bones, and cook the chops on low in crock pot for about 10 hours with onions and barbecue sauce.  The chops shred effortlessly after this, and are piled onto buns for pulled pork sandwiches.  So easy and good! 

With another of the packs of chops, I place one sliced onion in the bottom of crock, top with chops, and then top with two undiluted cans of tomato soup.  Bake on high for 4-6 hours, or low for 8-10 hours.  Everyone loves this – even people who don’t like pork chops. 

baby birds

PROVERBS 25:24    

 It is better to dwell in the corner of the housetop, than with a brawling woman and in a wide house. . .

Sage’s Sewing Space – Tool Caddy

Many home schoolers are also involved in the domestic arts to a high degree.  Aside from being thrifty, sewing is a creative outlet which is very empowering to women.  You need not be at the whim of mercurial fashion trends.

tools

If you sew, you know how important tools are to your work.  Scrounging around for items can cause frustration, not to mention wasted time – which no home schooler can afford.  Various contraptions are sold at Michael’s, Joann’s and Hobby Lobby to help with organizing such tools.  These are nice, but can be pricey.  I needed something that was easily portable from the cutting session to the sewing session.  Specifically – the tools involved in the cutting, altering, and marking of fabric before any actual sewing takes place.  The scissors used here should never be used for anything else!  Not even paper pattern cutting.   These things are used together – at the same time if you desire maximum efficiency.

caddy 1

Voila!  Problem solved.  This is a wrought iron silverware caddy from SAM’s club.  It was $9.98 cents when I bought it two years ago.  They usually carry them throughout the spring and summer, being intended for outdoor eating.  The price will vary during the season – going down markedly towards the end. 

  1. In the far right holder, I keep extra sharp items, including tracing wheels, rotary cutter, and an awl.
  2. In the center right holder, I keep all scissors, including dressmaking shears, pinking shears, paper pattern cutting scissors, and shears made especially for fragile fabrics.
  3. In the center left holder, I keep every manner and color of marking pencil.
  4. In the left holder, I keep a number of different hem gauges and small rulers.
  5. In the front curved section (intended for paper plates) I keep my Dritz Ezy- Hem (invaluable for shrinking in fullness on skirt hems.)
  6. In the square back holder (intended for paper napkins) I keep a tidy stack of many colors of transfer papers that are used with tracing wheels.

Once I’m done cutting and marking the fabric, the caddy is moved from the cutting area, to the sewing area, where I can easily access the scissors for trimming of seams while sewing.  The scissors are so easy to keep track of this way. 

caddy 2

I wear a wrist pin cushion while pinning and cutting, so there is no need to move a pin cushion around.  When it comes to home keeping and organization  it pays to think outside the box.  Specially made cutting tool organizers can be very expensive.  When it comes to being frugal, durable, efficient, and pretty – this silverware/cutting tool caddy can’t be beat! 

PROVERBS 31:25

singing in church

 Strength and honour are her clothing; and she shall rejoice in time to come.

Hints for Home Schoolers – Helpful Handmaid #3

Everyone has their own way of doing laundry.  Here – I just share mine, with the hope that you may glean something that will make your home-keeping more efficient – enabling you to devote more time to school.

scrub

There are still many women in the world today, who do laundry the old-fashioned way.  I can recall my grandmother’s scrub board stowed in a corner of the cellar, but I also recall her white Kenmore washing machine.  She never told fond stories of her years with the scrub board!  As she put it – “It’s not the washing – it’s the wringing.”  But – oh – she loved that Kenmore!  The washing machine has done more to raise the standard of cleanliness than any other appliance. 

There are actually many articles and books written decrying the effect of technology on home making.  Perhaps there is some justification for some of these claims, as anyone purchasing and using appliances nowadays, is not likely to have them for very long.  The intentional deterioration of quality keep us going back for new machines.  The other charge is made against the “over-cleanliness,” resulting in over consumption of water and electricity.  But the fact is – that before the “hand-maids” came along, women were spending three entire days a week, just maintaining the family’s clothing and textiles! 

It usually went something like this:

Wash on Monday 

Iron on Tuesday 

Sewing on Wednesday 

Market on Thursday

Cleaning on Friday 

Baking on Saturday 

Church on Sunday

Each of these “days” took an entire day to accomplish! 

laundry

I use the laundry basket method of sorting.  There are six of these baskets, and every morning I sort all laundry between the baskets.

  1. warm load – tumble dry low
  2. warm white bleach load – tumble dry medium
  3. hot bleach load – tumble dry medium
  4. cold wash – line dry
  5. warm dark load – tumble dry medium
  6. odds and ends – like kitchen and bath rugs, blankets, and pet things

Everyone has a “magic” number of daily loads to do to keep things from piling up.  For you it may be only one – for others it may be five.  For our current number of residents – it’s four.  Years back – it was six – and that included laundry for an invalid.  We likely do more laundry than most people do, but we live in the woods, do a lot of dirty activities, (like baking and gardening) and also use only cloth napkins and handkerchiefs, and once upon a time – cloth diapers and baby wipes. 

Each day as the laundry progresses, I stack the empty basket under the full ones.  By noon – I’m done with laundry for the day.  There will be a few items in the top baskets, but not enough for a load yet.  The whole stack of baskets then gets slid under the folding counter until the next day, when the whole procedure starts over.  In keeping with my love for schedules, if for some reason there isn’t enough to do the four full loads – I will look for something to wash – like one of four,  huge, well-used afghans from the family room.  I also have been making my own laundry detergent for the past decade.  It works better and costs less. Here.

Twice yearly, the bedding gets done.  That includes mattress pads, blankets, spreads, comforters, and pillows.  Everything.  Spring and fall bed changes take more loads than my normal four. 

Speaking of bed pillows – I hope you wash yours!  If your pillow feels “heavy,” it is full of really icky stuff.  All bedding should be washed in the hottest water possible, and mattresses should be thoroughly vacuumed.  Wash two pillows at a time, with hot water and bleach if possible.  After the cycle is finished, flip the pillows over and spin again.  This gets rid of most of the moisture and dries more easily. See here about dust mites.  One older lady I know, had never washed her pillows.  They weighed six pounds each!  That is just too gross! 

I have my laundry scheduled so that it does not interfere with showers and dishwasher times.  I only run the hot load after all showers have been taken, and after the first dishwasher run at 10:00 am.  This is not hard to accomplish if you are consistent. 

old pic

If you keep after it, you will never feel overwhelmed – and your family will be clean and comfortable.

Thank You, LORD, for these helpful handmaids.  They really are a blessing, and we are even more thankful for the families you have given us to care for. 

nice and clean

PSALM 57:7

King James Version (KJV)

My heart is fixed, O God, my heart is fixed: I will sing and give praise.

Hints for Home Schoolers – Helpful Handmaids #2 – Dryer

I know some of the lovely keepers out there are purists, and my admiration of them knows no bounds.  They are those that hang all washing on the line – inside and out. They save tons of money. . . sigh.  I’m not one of those ladies.  I use, and love, an electric dryer.  

dryer

Yes, I even do it in the summer.  For our family and where we live – it could almost qualify as self defense.    The amount of wildlife here would guarantee that some of the laundry would succumb to some beastie activities – not to mention mulberry stained bird droppings!  Another logistical point for our dryer use – pet hair.  Only a dryer will remove cat hair from laundry.

I probably should have covered the washing machine first – but as winter is right at the door, and it will be another week before the next Helpful Handmaids post, I wanted to share how your dryer can do double duty during cold weather.  Let’s first cover the basics, that most of us already know.

  1. Medium sized loads dry faster than small or large loads.
  2. Clean lint filter between loads – and sometimes in the middle of a cycle too!  It will help very linty loads like towels dry much, much faster. 
  3. The dryer exhaust duct must be frequently cleaned – even if you have a flap closure outside – critters can still get in there, in addition to the normal accumulation of lint. 
  4. Wash the lint screen occasionally, to remove any oils or residue from fabric softeners.  I spray mine with the spray cleaner from this Hints for Homeschoolers, scrub with a toothbrush, rinse thoroughly, and allow to air dry. 
  5. Running loads consecutively will be much more economical than doing one load a day.  It takes more energy for the dryer to heat up initially.  If you put one load in after another – the retained heat from the previous load will not only dry the next loads faster – it will reduce the energy required to heat the dryer.
  6. The top of the dryer makes a nice, warm place for yeast raised baked goods to rise.  Just cover with a plastic wrap, or a clean, lint free towel – and your bread or rolls will rise beautifully.
  7. Start with the lower settings loads (synthetics) finishing with the hottest, longest running load (like towels) so that you do not risk putting delicate things into a too hot dryer.
  8. A brush that will reach into the lint trap area is a good investment.   

This next section, will only be helpful to keepers living in cold winter areas.  It involves getting free heat from your dryer!  While it’s true that dryers warm the air in general while running, we’re talking about being more proactive.  By venting the heated air from the dryer to the inside during the winter – you can capture all that warm, moist air for free! In addition – you block cold air from entering the house through the dryer vent when not in use.

conversion kit

The outdoor duct is blocked off and insulated, while the duct work itself is attached to this lint trap.  Mine sits on a shelf above my washer and dryer.  The air from the dryer is vented into the trap, which is filled with water to trap lint.   If you have never seen how this works – you will be completely amazed and how much heat comes into your home from the dryer.  Not only that – in the frigid months – the air in houses can be dryer than the Mojave desert.  The free humidity is another bonus.  

This simple contraption costs less than $20, and is even available on Amazon.  We have used the same one for over fifteen years.  Our house is large, old, and difficult to heat.  With the laundry room under the kitchen – the entire kitchen floor is toasty while the dryer is running.  It takes my husband about 45 minutes to make the change over.  In the fall, he usually does it the last week of October; and in the spring, he changes it back to outside venting in the first week of April. 

Two young couples we know, have started doing this in their tiny houses.  When the dryer is running – their central heating turns off! 

plastic mesh

I do recommend, however, that you use a piece of plastic needlepoint canvas like this, cut to fit the vent, to capture more of the lint.  Very easy to clean, and cheap! 

Happy drying – and I hope  that you may glean something valuable from these hints.  May your precious family bask in the love you have for them, and may your home- keeping reflect the love of Christ to the world.  Having your jewels snuggled into clean and soft clothing and sleep-ware,  is like a tender embrace from you.  What a blessing it is, to have a  family to do laundry for.  While you are folding and handling their clothing, warm from the dryer – pray for each of  those the LORD has entrusted to you. 

cottage in snow

Proverbs 31:21                  

King James Version (KJV)

She is not afraid of the snow for her household: for all her household are clothed with scarlet.