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42 Ways to Reuse & Save

Submitted by: anonymous  03/19/2009 5:20 PM
 
Editor's Note: This tip was originally submitted in response to one of our newsletter questions: What Do You Reuse To Save a Buck?

things we reuse to save a buck....

1. We reuse fabric softener sheets, 6-10 used one dries one load.

2. Boxes bath soap comes in....
turned inside out great for freshening trash cans and drawers.

3. Last few drops of dishsoap....
add water for a mild hand or fine hand washables soap.

4. Heels of bread, odds and ends of rolls etc...
we save to make croutons...dice and freeze. use when container is full.

5. All plastic bags from grocery stores, bread, tortilla's etc....
used for small trash cans, cleaning litter box and tossing weeds.

6. Old glass jars from food....
Use for cooking grease disposal or use to house homemade salad dressing and sauces or refrigerator pickles.

7. Newspapers....
Clean windows, use to protect table when kids make art.

8. Rubber bands, envelopes, paper clips, papers written on only one side that come home from kids school....
We use the school memo's that come home to write to do lists,chore lists and shopping lists. and we add the rubber bands and paper clips that come home on those same memo's to our own supply. Envelopes we reuse too. We either carefully pull off the address stickers and add our own or we just cross theirs out and apply ours over theirs.

9. Cracker crumbs, bread crumbs, chip crumbs, cereal crumbs.....
get saved for meat loaf.

10. Old washrags,socks and towls....
get turned into cleaning rags.

11. Old ripped up quilts and blankets....
get saved just in case we move, they are great for wrapping breakables in...like art and mirrors.

12. Tupperware....
When its too old to house food anymore it either gets used to house kids toys and art supplies or its used to house hygiene supplies like soap, lotions, cotton balls etc.

13. Left over dill pickle juice...
once pickles gone, add sliced cucumbers to it, wait 24 hours and you now have refrigerator pickles reminiscent of clausans....or you can use the pickle juice as a meat marinade for pork chops or chicken.

For the marinade....in a large container with lid add the pickle juice,a 1/2 cup lemon juice or a glass of lemonade(I sub orange when I have to.) and 1 envelope of dried Lipton onion soup mix. Try to marinade in this sealed container for 12-16 hours. gives chicken a nice tangy flavor.

14. Body spray....
when your down to the last ounce of body spray...add water to it and use as a light room spray...shake before each use.

15. Water...
When my kids are done with their water I make them pour whatever is left on the lawn from the upstairs balcony. That way it doesn't just go down the drain.

16. Used coffee grounds....
I use them to fertilize my plants, especially succulents.

17. Ziplock bags from pharmacy...
my medicine from the pharmacy comes in: I reuse as coupon bags, use as a car trash bag for used tissues and snack wrappers.

18. Last few ounces of spaghetti sauce....
you cannot get out of the jar.....Add water and shake really well, next day use to make vegetable or ministrone broth...just put it in a pot with left over veggies, beans, pasta and some leftover bouillon(all of which I freeze until I need them) and reheat... Great with the basil I grow on my table.

19. Empty plastic kitty litter containers....
with handles... Use the empty one to house the bags of kitty chips(aka poop) mark that container dirty,then the new one is left blank. When the old one "dirty" becomes full...its typically time to buy new kitty litter so the old new becomes the new "dirty" and the new new becomes the new clean.

20. Old greeting cards....
I have received with no sentimental value....Give to kids, they cut out the pictures and glue them to a card they folded from construction paper for fun or they turn them into tree decoration, just let them cut out picture, punch out hole and tie a cheap yarn or string in it.

21. Old mugs and glasses....
become great pen, pencil and paint brush storage.

22. Old boxes from costco...
The cat enjoys them for a few days, the kids turn them into doll houses, puppet show stages, cards, blocks and drums..

23. The big bag that toilet paper and paper towels comes in is reused to line our office/kitchen trash cans.

24. Books,
we pick books everyone likes (for example the twilight series/harry potter and classics) we take turns reading them one at a time. and when we're positive we're all done we donate them in great condition to good will or arc and receive a tax write off (we only claim maybe 10-25% of what we originally paid for them to be fair)

25. old arm in hammer baking soda...
that sat in the fridge or freezer. Instead of tossing it out I put it in my toilet bowl and use it to scrub it clean. Great way to get that last little bit of use out of it.

26. Old butter/cool whip tubs....
that are freezer safe... Great as one time use tupperwares to freeze leftovers in or to store pudding in. Also great as disposable bowls for cereal or sandwiches during car trips, emergencies and when mom is too sick to wash dishes. Sometimes I stack them up clean in a plastic bag and store for just that occasion :)

27. Free condiment, sweet n low packets....
This isn't really reusing, but If I go to a restaurant and free condiments are offered I take or request them whether I need them or not, I then add to my tiny stash in the kitchen.like salsa, ketchup, mustard, oil, vinegar, pepper and sweet-N-Low. Often it's only a few packets but makes the kitchen staples last longer. I don't go crazy with it...Just what is offered in normal amounts.

28. Baskets...
When I get gifts from friends and family they often come in gift baskets, I save these and donate them to my kids school. Every year their school holds a fundraiser during the summer and often they take odds and ends of new donatable goods and put them together into gift bags and baskets...So in this way I am helping my kids school raise $.

29. Old used printer toner/ink cartridges....
I use them to get a discount on the new ones.

30.Old gift bags....
I get these from stores, avon and gifts I receive during holidays. I either reuse them as gift bags for my kids for birthdays and holidays or I use them as donation bags to put all the items I will donate to good will or arc so I don't have to use one of my good trash bags.

31. Old but nice tissue paper....
from gifts and avon/stores. I reuse this to stuff gift bags I give to others.My kids make paper flowers with them and either straws, pipe cleaners or popsicle sticks or I give them to my kids school so they can use them to wrap the breakable masks, pots and other works of art the kiddos make, so they come home home in one piece in their book bags.

32. Plant cuttings...
When my plants have babies I use them as cuttings and extend my garden farther....this works great with succulents like chicks and hens and aloe veras.

33. Wood chips/planks for grilling.....
We buy wood chips/wood planks for our barbeque. We reuse the wood chips over and over till they burn to nothing and the wood planks become wood chips :)

34. Cheap shampoo or body wash....
When it fails to work, doesn't smell quite right or is too harsh for my skin I used it to scrub my tub and sinks with.

35. Make up brushes....
When I am done with them my kids use them to make art or pretend to be detectives.

36. My kids used school supplies....
like folders, binders etc at the end of the year they come home... I reuse them as college supplies. I do online college through devry so NOBODY see's my second hand school supplies.

37. Old cookie cutters....
either become christmas tree decorations or my kids use them as stencils.

38. Brown Paper bags...
My kids either.... use them to take sack lunches on field trips or we cut them down the sides and open them up and use them as art paper for kiddos.

39. Old electronics...
When the adults are done with their walkman's, cell phones and computers they get passed down to kiddos....The cell phones are never hooked up and become play phones. The CD walkmans are great so kids can listen to music and since their used they can practice taking care of it on one that isn't new...Old computers and printers are used for homework only with no internet access. This way our kids can type up home work,reports and print them up...The can also make their own banners, stationary, labels, envelopes, cards etc if they have the software for it and a color printer. They can go into print shop or art shop and draw and color to. They also use the built in spell check, dictionary, calculator and language programs. Plus we can get games or educational programs they can use. But again no internet access for fear for their safety.

40. Old crystal/glass table wear, linens...
Old clear cyrstal or white porcelean candy dishes, sugar bowls etc...become great ways for a teen girl to keep jewlery...cotton balls,makeup and treasures...Even if none of them match if you throw in a white crotched runner from grandma or your local thrift shop and it looks vintage sophisticate for a vanity...Which you can find or make from what you have or a thrift store or garage sale. Just get an old mirror in a frame and an old desk and chair...Sometime after garage sales the owners put them on the curb and give them to you just to get rid of them. Put the mirror on the wall behind the desk and you have a vanity. for extra effect paint it white or a pastel color of her choice like pink,lilac or blue.

41. Halloween candy....
Freeze or store for decorate the gingerbread house or the cakes. Use the chocolate to make cookies and brownies or melt for use in cocoa or icing.
Also you plain chocolate milk or dark to add some authentic spanish flair to mole, spaghetti sauce and chili.

42. Salsa juice....
Use the liquid sauce on the bottom of the salsa jar that is to runny for chips to mix with white rice....Now you have spanish rice. Sometimes I also add the salsa juice to soup,chili or scrambled eggs while their cooking for added flavor...
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Comments:
 
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In regards to #27 - taking extra condiments from restaurants for home use.
As a consumer in many restaurants there is no two ways about this activity, it is stealing, bottom line! The condiments are purchased by the owner for our patrons to use on food they have ordered from us. They are not put on the table to be taken home and used on foods prepared in YOUR home! If all customers had this mindset the cost to the owner would be significant. I am disappointed that TipHero allowed this to be printed. Especially in this economy!
 
Posted by Kalene on April 16, 2009 3:52 PM
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I have no problem taking my unused condiments home. I know the restaurant would not think kindly of me putting the ketchup packet that I had handled back into the bin. Nothing in excess. What is worse is seeing all of those unused condiments being thrown away.
 
Posted by anonymous on April 16, 2009 4:05 PM
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Back to # 13. If you like pickled hard boiled eggs, peel and drop them in the brine. Especially good in Claussen's brand. After about a week they can be eaten plain, or used for deviled eggs, or in any salad.
 
Posted by anonymous on April 16, 2009 4:09 PM
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Hi Kalene -

Thank you for your comment.

We at Tip Hero in no way advocate stealing, and we're sorry if that is the sense we gave you by publishing these reader tips.

We publish reader comments and tips in their entirety (we do not edit them). Occasionally, we will not publish a comment or tip because we feel the content is inappropriate. In this case, we felt that the reader provided a number of very good, useful tips and that the Tip Hero community would benefit from them.

Again, thank you for your comment.

- Tip Hero Editor
 
Posted by Tip Hero Editor on April 16, 2009 4:41 PM
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Cut/tear dryer sheets into quarters before the first use. Use 1/4 for each load. Works just fine.
 
Posted by anonymous on April 16, 2009 5:12 PM
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In regards to "stealing" condiments from fast food chains. I don't think she meant it that way if you grab some mustard from a bin for your food and you have some left on your table I see nothing wrong with taking it home, otherwise it WOULD end up in the trash.
 
Posted by anonymous on April 16, 2009 6:01 PM
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I agree that taking home the unused condiments from a fast food meal is NOT stealing. I know from experience that the used packets would go into the trash. Additionally have you ever counted the number of packets you get from drive thru????
 
Posted by anonymous on April 16, 2009 8:37 PM
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True...sometimes the fast food place or the restaurant will give too many .So then I will take them home . I have worked in restaurants and anything previously handled by a customer gets tossed for safety and hygiene purposes.At least in the places I worked in.
 
Posted by anonymous on April 16, 2009 9:52 PM
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#6. I use my old jars for storing rice and sugar, easier to handle that the big packages. Add a nice ribbon and use for the holidays to give jar cookies recipes.

#25. I save the plastic packages that my sheet sets and comforters come in. They have zippers and I use them to store everything from my sewing supplies, laces, fabric, hair rollers and other comforters after I launder them. They store well and you can see what inside.

#38. You can also use large brown grocery bags for wrapping paper to mail boxes. Grocery stores will give you a couple if you ask.
 
Posted by Shelley on April 17, 2009 1:40 AM
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These reuse & save tips are super! I LOVE gardening. Whether it be flowers or vegetables; I love it all.

If you save the inside cylinder from your paper towels &/or toilet paper; this is what I do with them: The TP ones I cut in half & the paper towel ones I cut 3-4 equal parts. Then I place them in a shallow box & fill each one with potting soil & plant flower or veggie seeds in them.

When they are ready to plant outside, you can just place the whole thing in the ground because it is biodegradible!
 
Posted by Kathy Gordon on April 17, 2009 7:19 AM
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RE: #24 - Books
I have had great success with the following website that promotes swapping books. Check it out. The only cost involved mailing expenses.

http://www.paperbackswap.com
 
Posted by anonymous on April 17, 2009 10:28 AM
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Great tips and comments! I use the back of used envelopes to put my grocery list on and the coupons go inside, I add a pencil in for "on the way" forgotten items.

Dill pickle juice added to mayo is great on sliced cucumbers or emergency salad dressing.
 
Posted by Chris on April 17, 2009 3:48 PM
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#27 hey taking condiments from restaurants ( just of what is given to you w/ a little extra.. say for eating purposes, and say you dont use them like you originally intended)... TAKE THEM HOME. reuse them... the restaurant will discard what ever is left on your table anyway. if you're concerned about saving and what YOU could do to help save. take, use, don't waste.
 
Posted by anonymous on April 17, 2009 3:56 PM
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I too think that taking home the condiments from a restaurant is stealing. How about telling them that you do not need the condiments so that it would keep prices down for others. How about that for a while. It is people like you that causes restaurants to raise their prices for the honest.
 
Posted by anonymous on April 17, 2009 8:29 PM
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31. I "re-gift" tissue paper, but often use in decoupage.
 
Posted by anonymous on April 18, 2009 3:38 PM
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I save EVERY type of container that may have another use. It drives my hubby nuts...but if I don't find a use schools seem to always be happy to get things that can either be decorated for storage or make a craft project.

One of my personal favorites is saving pretty empty tissue boxes. If I go to someplace like Costco and get a huge supply of tissues that are in really ugly boxes this makes a simple solution. You open one end of both boxes...take the new ones out and slide them into the old empty box. Tape the side shut...and you have a more decorative box.

If you want, ones you save can be taken apart and folded flat. If you donate them to kids, inside out, they make little "rooms" that have nice "wallpaper", and put together with a little creativity make a little doll house!
 
Posted by anonymous on April 18, 2009 3:39 PM
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I always use glass pickle or salsa jars for food storage! I'm wary of plastic food containers anyway, and I don't have to worry with glass. Plus, glass won't hold on to food odors like many plastics will.
 
Posted by dogmama on April 21, 2009 12:03 AM
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#1 Used fabric softener sheets are great for picking up hair from the bathroom floor. It's like a Swiffer, but free (and you get on your hands and knees).
 
Posted by anonymous on April 21, 2009 1:52 PM
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Another way to reduce/reuse dryer sheets is: after one use, simply wet the sheet, pour a tablespoon or so of liquid fabric softener onto it and toss it into the dryer with the next load.

One dryer sheet can be used many, many times, and the liquid softener goes a lot further when you only use a tablespoon or so instead of a whole capful.

If you don't have dryer sheets, a damp wash cloth works just as well.

Also, if you dry your clothes for about 5-10 minutes and then hang to dry, you get the "fluffiness" of dryer clothes with the economy of hanging your laundry.

One more tip--when you buy foaming hand soap, re-use the container by filling with about 1/4 - 1/2 inch of liquid soap and the rest water. Make sure you don't use soap that has lotion in it, though. We have re-used a "Bob-the Builder" foaming hand soap dispenser for about 5 years so far.
 
Posted by csmcmc on April 22, 2009 6:10 PM
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No dryer sheets used here, throw a couple of tennis balls in your dryer. They soften clothes and last for years.
 
Posted by Jenn on April 23, 2009 9:09 AM
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#3 I start out right off the bat diluting my dish soap about 1/2 in a pretty glass container with one of those vinegar/oil spouts. It thins it enough to make it come out well and it works just fine.

In the end your soap last twice as long. In fact, you waste less water rinsing off excess soap on everything as a bonus too.
 
Posted by anonymous on April 27, 2009 2:51 PM
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I use old tissue boxes or soda boxes to store my used plastic grocery bags. Simply stuff bags in opening of box and pull out when needed.
 
Posted by Serena on April 28, 2009 1:47 AM
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#5-Plastic bags from grocery stores can be cut into 1 inch strips and tied together end to end and crocheted into grocery bags that last much longer

#7-I use old newspapers as weed stop. Just put a few layers around your garden and cover with a couple inches of dirt/soil. If you do this for your vegetable garden make sure that you don't use the paper that has colored ink used on it.

#29-You can take most ink cartridges to Walgreens to be refilled.
 
Posted by anonymous on April 29, 2009 6:13 PM
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*I reuse plastic take out containers. When they've been reused to many times and start to loose their shape, I use them to start seeds for my vegetable garden.
*Also, save the styrofoam take out containers/cups for seedlings.
*Have not tried this one yet, but heard that yogurt containers can be re-used this way as well.
*Old dinner plates can be spray-painted with a non-toxic exterior paint and used underneath you planters.
*Plastic utensils can be used as gardening tools.
*I also start seeds in egg cartons. Poke holes for drainage with a nail or a small screwdriver. Cut the top off and use as a tray to catch water.
*I also save the plastic plant containers when I purchase any new plants for my garden. Wash the containers with hot water with some chlorine to be sure they're bacteria and disease-free, and reuse them when starting other plants from seeds or cuttings.
*Save egg shells to put in my compost pile.
*After I eat a banana, the peel can go into a compost pile or stick it in the ground close to the tomato plants--they will love the potassium.
*Save old newspapers to block the weeds.
*Reuse bath water and plastic water bottles. My garden is "based" on Square Foot Gardening method, I have raised beds and the soaker hose are too big and heavy and might break my baby plants. So, to save money and water, I use bath water and plastic water bottles. Here's how it works:
1. To save bath water, either take a bath or a shower in a tub/shower combo with a plug (for me that means I take a shower in my guest bathroom because in my master bathroom it's a shower stall--can't plug that).
2. Scoop the bathwater into a bucket.
3. I also save plastic water bottles (I take bottled water with me to work).
4. Poke small holes on one side of your water bottles. I use a diaper pin for that. Also, I find it helpful to draw a vertical line with a permanent marker so I can easily tell where the tiny holes are.
5. Take the top of the plastic bottles and immerse them in the water in your bucket filled with bath water, when your bottles are filled, screw on the tops and leave them in the bucket with the extra water to prevent loosing any water while carrying the bucket to the garden.
6. Place each water bottle with the holes facing the soil (if you drew a line with a permanent marker, this should be very easy) near each plant (or between two plants, if they're close enough).
7. You can control how much or how little water comes out of the water bottle by adjusting the top (the tighter it's screwed on, the less air it lets in and the less water comes out).

An added bonus--because the water in the bottles drains slowly, it gets warmed up by the sun, which the plants really love (just like most people don't enjoy ice-cold showers, your plant's roots get shocked by the cold water coming out of the water hose).
 
Posted by anonymous on June 28, 2009 12:46 PM
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Use a ball of tin foil for your dryer. No need for dryer sheets. You can use the same ball of tin foil forever!
 
Posted by anonymous on July 29, 2009 4:45 PM
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no longer used cell phones can go to organizations[mustard seed ect..] that help domestic violence cases. once the phone is disconnected 911 will still work.
 
Posted by kathy on October 08, 2009 6:07 PM
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re: 13. Left over dill pickle juice... soak carrot sticks -- yum! or lightly drizzle/sprinkle over baked/broiled fish fillets if you don't have any dill weed on hand.

Lots of great ideas here... thanks!
 
Posted by Jo on October 18, 2009 11:08 AM
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Left over dill pickle juice: Pour over your pork chops when you bake them. No need to add further seasonings and it makes them fork tender.
 
Posted by anonymous on October 22, 2009 3:27 PM
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Save and use all small boxes,sized about 3" by 4".Wrap with pretty,fun or kid friendly christmas paper.purchase a box of hooks used for christmas balls or poke holes and use any kind of string,and hang them as ornaments on your christmas tree.
 
Posted by simplicity on October 24, 2009 4:25 PM
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Instead of "saving soap scraps", I simply attach the old one to the new one. Its less messy and saves time and really works.
 
Posted by RockyRidgeRRRF on November 26, 2009 8:18 AM
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Soap scraps into liquid soap dispenser, add water, shake and dispense. The scraps dissolve over time.
 
Posted by anonymous on December 23, 2009 7:24 PM
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I don't know... I tried that soap scraps into liquid soap dispenser, add, shake, etc.... DID NOT DISSOLVE AFTER 6 MONTHS WAITING PERIOD!!!
 
Posted by Doubting Thomas on February 21, 2010 6:41 PM
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What and how would tin-foil in the dryer do or be? Just curious, never heard of it and it was listed to use instead of dryer sheets.
 
Posted by anonymous on February 24, 2010 11:04 AM
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Great ideas here! I do use and reuse fabric softener sheets, and also just use the dryer on air-dry for 10 minutes per load and then hang to dry. Very few loads are completely dried in my dryer. We've tried homemade laundry soap and some of the other money saving laundry ideas (dryer sheet alternatives), and what we discovered is that we prefer nice smelling and non-grungy laundry! Whites became dingy and colors seemed to lack something after using the homemade laundry detergent for 6 months or so. Also, we kept having to add products to try to accomodate these shortcomings and ended up spending more money anyway. We tried adding Fabreze Laundry Odor Eliminator and lots of Oxi-Clean (neither of which are cheap) and our clothes still smelled sort of musty and just looked grungy - musty smelling clothes are just very offensive and I can only imagine what other people thought of us! We went back to purchased laundry soap (just using less than manufacturer recommendations) and reusing fabric softener sheets and try to save money in other areas.
 
Posted by anonymous on February 27, 2010 12:16 PM
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