Useful Tips |Lifehack 🤔
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Useful Tips |Lifehack 🤔
if you're a trans guy on your period just remember your body is doing all this simply because it's desperate for mpreg starring you
~ Useful Tips: A Handbook of Miscellaneous Information, by Albert Alonzo Wentz, 1921
Interesting fact: early paint was often mixed with lye (a natural insecticide) so flies actually did dislike it
ANTI-CAPITALIST CLEANING
Punk isn't just about cool clothes so here's some tips for cleaning that opt out of capitalism's idea that you need 600 different products that are often harmful to the environment to properly clean and will also save you a load of money.
I have ammassed these tips over years of working jobs that were cleaning or glorified cleaning, being poor, having certain requirements that limit what i can buy from the shops including sensetivity to the sorts of fragrances often in cleaning products, being haunted by the ghosts of old ladies who have very specific ideas about cleaning.
The only cleaning products i have in my house are baking soda, washing soda, bar soap, white/distilled vinegar, 2 kinds of washing up liquid (one milder one for the dishes that's better for the environment and i can buy refills for and another for cleaning other stuff), and bleach. I never buy plastic sponges, cloths, cleaning wipes, etc. The only disposable thing I use is kitchen roll/paper towels. I have one seldom used long plastic dish brush for bottles and I buy metal scourers bc I use stainless steel pans not non stick, plus the usual (cotton string not microfibre) mop, bucket, brushes, etc. I usually have a pair of rubber gloves but again they're seldom used for anythign other than hair dye.
Listen to me.....
Microfibre cleaning cloths are bullshit.
They're not absorbant, they're plastic, they're a scam (i have strong feelings about this lol). I use cotton towelling cloths for almost all cleaning. Dishes, wiping surfaces, spillages, cleaning the bath, dusting, etc. Currently I use old face cloths that were too rough for washing skin but in the past i have literally just torn up scabby old towels, no need to even hem them or anything. You can wash and reuse them probably thousands of times including a boil wash, it doesn't matter if there are stains that don't come out, it's not dirt, it's just discolouration, a couple of mine have green and blue patches from wiping up spilled paint. But if it bothers you that much you can soak them in bleach.
Here's a great recipe:
DIY washing powder for clothes
i literally never use shop bought detergent bc this works so much better, is much cheaper, and the washing machine doesn't need cleaned nearly so often. it is also GREAT if you don't like the overpowering scents that are usually in shop bought ones.
you will need:
1 part bicarbonate of soda/baking soda
1 part washing soda
1 part grated bar soap
simply grate your soap and mix with the other ingredients. I usually mix 1 cup of each at a time and it lasts a couple of months but any amount is fine as long as it's more or less the same amount of each ingredient.
the best soap ive used is pure olive oil soap that costs like £4 for a huge block but ive also used normal cheap ass hand/body soap and it worked fine too.
Bleach
Bleach is great because you can use it for multiple things and while it has a smell I personally do not find it cloying and overwhelming like other anti bactirial products.
I use it whenever I want to kill germs (like the toilet) but it can be used to whiten things too like white shirts that have gone a bit yellow under the arms, sheets, towels, etc. Just mix with some water in a bucket and soak the fabric until it's nice and white again.
If you have tiles in your house and the grout between them is getting a bit stained pour a little bleach on an old toothbrush and give it a scrub. It works great.
You can also use it to make cool designs on dark coloured clothing (check out my bleach tie dye post here)
Baking soda is fucking brilliantly versatile
your grandma probably knows this but capitalism would rather you buy 12 products that do one thing than one product that does 12 things so it's trying to make us forget. its non toxic, it's cheap, it's mildly abraisive, here are a few things that I use it for.
the above recipe for washing powder
pour some down a smelly/blocked drain with some white vinegar, let it sit until it stops fizzing, then empty a kettle of boiling water down after it. (any vinegar works really but i don't like cooking with the same kind I use for cleaning and distilled white vinegar is the traditional one)
mix into a paste with a little water and use to scrub tea and coffee stains out of mugs
mix into a paste with a drop of washing up liquid for a more powerful cleaning paste
mix with vinegar to clean the hob and the oven, it's useful to fill a spray bottle with the vinegar. (scrubbing with a metal scourer also helps, i've never managed to scratch my cooker doing this)
sprinkle on liquid, especially smelly liquid, to absorb it then simply vacuum it up when it's dried.
the box usually has a few different ways to use it too.
Washing up liquid/dish soap can be used for so much more than dishes
it's basically liquid soap that is particularly good at breaking down fat/oil/grease. It's also a mild disinfectant. As I said I have one kind I use every day for the actual dishes but I keep another bottle of bog standard stuff, not even fairy liquid just the cheap lidl version, for general cleaning.
Ever spent ages trying and failing to scrub the bath or basin clean with dedicated bathroom sprays?? A lot of the dirt that comes off our bodies and hair when we wash is oily, and if like me you use solid bar soap and shampoo there's even more oil in that. So washing up liquid works really really well to break that down. So well I was angry when I first tried it bc I had spent so long trying to clean the bathroom with horrible sprays that don't work properly. Just squirt a bit on a damp cloth and wipe until it's clean then rinse off with water. (it's usually easier to check if something is clean by feel rather than sight, a clean bath will feel 'squeaky' under your fingers, this is where the expression squeaky clean comes from!)
I also use it for the kitchen floor, mix with water, spread it over the floor, leave it to soak a bit, then clean up. I usually just mop but something the old lady ghosts are right about is that sometimes it's good to get down on your knees with a stiff bristled brush and give it a good old scrub.
For cleaning the windows or glass shower doors, all you need is washing up liquid and water (think about it, you use it to clean drinking glasses and it works great). Another thing the ghosts are right about is that newspaper is the absolute best thing for getting the streaks off glass surfaces, just mind the ink will come off on your hands so watch what you touch with them. Again, that's one less plastic bottle of spray to buy.
In fact there aren't many things in your house you can't clean with some hot soapy water and a cloth.
I hope someone finds this post useful. This is a non exhaustive list, please add your own ideas and tips, I am not an authority on this, just a guy who has done a lot of cleaning.
Everything you need to know to choose the right gas mask or goggles to protect your eyes and lungs from chemical agents and projectiles.
@crimethinc has a wonderful tumblr, but I'm honestly too frayed to find this within their archive. Still, buy their books, read their online pieces, they are great folks. I take off my Adrian M15 to them that I bought for purely recreational purposes (watching La Grand Illusion and Paths of Glory and crying).
Accessibility in food isn't always "oh i cant eat that" sometimes its taking an extra step or two to source the problem and make it better, for me i cant soups or drink hot liquids without gagging so when i make ramen i use the packet to make a yummy paste of other seasonings and spices and drain the noodles to make it easier to enjoy, if you can source the problem you can maybe figure out a work around, will this work for every autistic person? no. but it works for me and might work for others <3
Hey Hi!!! I found your photographs are really amazing and nice. How do you capture these beautiful moments!
Any suggestions for a beginner hobbyist photographer like me?
Hi 👋
One useful tip I could give you is to never think that your camera (or phone) isn't good enough so you have to upgrade.
If you have "old" gear, just use that. Learn the basics (ISO, aperture and shutter speed) and composition techniques which are the main factors to achieve an effective photo; a shot that will have an impact. There are useful photographers like Mike Chudley, Simon d'Entremont and Rich Art (on yt) who give useful tips 😀.
You can try learning about the light and how it affects the photos too.
Hope this helps!