Benefits of incorporating sustainable design: Bryden Wood’s Head of Sustainability teaches Manchester School of Architecture (MArch) students
It sounds ridiculously simplistic, but as someone who has suffered many years with shelf-based anxiety, I promise you it works!.
I love my swiffer.It’s so easy to use and lightweight and it picks up every little bit of everything from every nook and cranny of my floors.
With 2 cats running around here now, I can easily use it 4 or 5 times a day..The only problem with that is that those little disposable cloths that you buy for it can really add up quickly.But not any more!
Here’s how I make my own cloths to reuse.They really work just as well!.
All you need is some kind of basic fleece fabric.
I just used an old scarf in happy colors that I thought would look cute on my swiffer, but if you went to the fabric store and picked up half a yard of whatever fleece, that would make you about a gazillion cloths.. Next the only real step to this “project” is to cut your pieces of fleece to the right size.With the cheapo rollers, if I got busy and waited too long between coats and the roller was too crusty, I just got rid of it and started with a new one.
That only happened one time, but the point is that it wasn’t something I had to worry about, so I had no excuse to put it off..Tip #3: The technique.
I went over the grooves and the sides first with a good angled brush before rolling.Sounds like a quick little step right?