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Home Maintenance Ben Soreff Home Maintenance Ben Soreff

Guest Post - A Comprehensive Deep Cleaning Guide for Your Home Before the Holidays

Use this comprehensive guide to lift the grime and make even the most shadowy corners of your home shine with holiday cheer.

If you’re expecting guests this holiday season, you’ve probably spent a good amount of time cleaning the house already. Yet, even the most attentive hosts can forget to clean the oft-neglected nooks and crannies. After all, there are more important things to worry about than cleaning your oven, right? Well, if you want to make a good impression and create a warm and welcoming atmosphere, it’s all about the details.

Use this comprehensive guide to lift the grime and make even the most shadowy corners of your home shine with holiday cheer.

1. Dust Blinds and Fans

It’s easy to forget about cleaning your blinds and ceiling fan blades. Out of sight, out of mind, right? Then, one day, you flip a switch or pull a cord and there’s dust everywhere. Don’t let this be you on Thanksgiving or Christmas day! Dust those bad boys off before guests arrive using a microfiber cloth. Fight buildup with a solution of equal parts white vinegar and water and leave blinds open to dry thoroughly.

2. Vacuum Drawers

You open and close your kitchen drawers multiple times a day, but how often do you actually remove their contents and clean them? In the chaos of cooking, all kinds of crumbs and food particles can fall in there. The last thing you want your guests to see when they’re grabbing a fork is some old lemon zest and rogue grains of rice, so grab a vacuum and get cleaning.

3. Clean the Oven

Before you cook the Thanksgiving bird, make sure you remove all those pieces of burnt, crusty food from your oven with a combination of water, baking soda, and white vinegar. That way you aren’t cooking up funky smells or tastes on the big day. Coat the oven interior with your homemade, chemical-free cleaning solution and leave it to sit overnight to loosen stubborn buildup and grime. Then, wipe everything clean the following morning.

4. Wipe All Surfaces

Remember to wipe down all of your home’s surfaces the night before guests or in-laws arrive. You can use an all-purpose cleaner or sanitizer for plastic, metal, and glass surfaces like windows, mirrors, and faucets. However, you might want to use a special solution of mild dish soap and water to clean more sensitive materials like wood veneer. Read product labels and spot test small areas to prevent stains and maximize your cleaning efforts.

5. Clean the Toilet

Toilets were made to get dirty, but sometimes even the toughest thrones fall victim to hard water stains and bacteria buildup. If you don’t remove them before guests arrive, those questionable-looking streaks will gross them out big time. Show your porcelain who’s boss with a mixture of vinegar and baking soda or get scrubbing with a pumice stone. With a little time and effort, your toilet will be good as new in no time.

Make a List, Check It Twice

Take a hint from Santa and make a deep cleaning list this holiday season. Add the above to-dos and take inventory of other nooks and crannies that might need some attention. If you remember that the big picture is all about the small details, your loved ones are sure to feel right at home in your humble — and sparkling clean — abode.

Author bio: Rose Morrison is the managing editor of Renovated, where she offers advice on home renovation, maintenance, and organization.nd slow-paced lifestyle now, because your little ones will be back in school before you know it!

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Home Maintenance Ben Soreff Home Maintenance Ben Soreff

Common Warning Signs That Something Is Wrong in Your HVAC System

Your home’s HVAC system is what keeps your home warm in the winter and cool in the summer. It is easy to ignore until something goes wrong. There are common warning signs that something could be wrong with the HVAC system. If you notice these signs, it is best to have an HVAC repair company look at them before it fails.

Your home’s HVAC system is what keeps your home warm in the winter and cool in the summer. It is easy to ignore until something goes wrong. There are common warning signs that something could be wrong with the HVAC system. If you notice these signs, it is best to have an HVAC repair company look at them before it fails.

HVAC Repair

HVAC stands for the heating, ventilation, and air conditioning system in your home. It includes the furnace, air conditioning unit, and the ductwork. There are quite a few moving parts that keep this system running to keep your home comfortable.

Having an HVAC repair company perform annual maintenance can keep the system running properly. But sometimes unexpected problems can occur. There are various warning signs that you might hear, see or smell, that can alert you that something is wrong with your HVAC system.

Unusual Smells

If you notice a slight burning smell when you turn on the furnace for the first time of the season, it could be the smell of accumulated dust burning off, and it’s usually not a reason to worry. However, if you notice a burning smell at any other time, you should call an HVAC company right away.

Smelling something like rotten eggs or a sulfur smell can indicate a gas leak from your furnace or another area of the house. If you ever smell this, you should leave the home immediately and call the fire department. Do not call from inside the house or turn on light switches, because that could trigger a gas explosion.

Other unusual smells include chemical, moldy, or musty scents. These can all indicate a problem with either the heating or air conditioning system.

Water or Condensation

One function of the HVAC system is to balance the humidity in the house. If you see puddles of water or condensation on or near the system, it could be a sign of a problem. Pipes and coils can wear out and develop leaks. Water leaking or condensation from these problems can cause mold or mildew to form, which is an unhealthy situation.

Strange Noises

Noises like whining, screeching, banging, or thumping are all signs that the HVAC system is not operating properly. Noises like these are usually something like a broken belt, loose screws, or debris that has become stuck in the external parts of the HVAC system.

Noises like wind or whistling can mean there is a leak in the ductwork. Less airflow coming through the vents can also indicate leaky ductwork, which will make the system work harder to cool or heat the home.

You should call an HVAC company if you notice one of these warning signs in your HVAC system. Getting a small problem fixed soon will keep the problem from getting worse.

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Home Organization Ben Soreff Home Organization Ben Soreff

Ways To Make More Space Within Your Home

Feel like your home is cluttered and claustrophobic? Here are some good ways to make space within your home for a more comfortable lifestyle.

Regardless of your home’s size, it’s possible to feel like you’re claustrophobic if your home becomes too cluttered. Luckily, with clever uses of lighting, furniture manipulation, and storage, there are many ways to make more space within your home. Let us show you a few of the best methods you can take advantage of.

Use Mirrors and Lighting

Without adequate lighting, much of your house can become obscured in shadows, especially in the corners. Consequently, even the emptiest of rooms feel smaller because you can’t physically see all of them. By allowing more natural lighting into your home, you can fill out the dark corners and make it feel larger. To help facilitate this light, you should use warm and bright wall colors and mirrors. Doing this helps reflect the light around the room. Furthermore, mirrors create the illusion of space even if they’re simply reflecting the room at you.

Balance Your Furniture

Another way to make more space within your home is to rearrange your furniture into a more pleasing balance. Before you worry, we’re not referring to the practice of feng shui, but rather the simple fact that rooms look more spacious when furnished well. The key is to devise a layout that makes it easy to move through the space. At the same time, it should keep the entirety of the room captivating.

Create New Storage

Maybe you feel like you have too much stuff. Or perhaps you need a storage place for tools and equipment that are important but unnecessary in everyday life. Tool sheds are old solutions to such problems. But these days, prefabricated sheds allow for quick and easy construction. They also look nice. In fact, building a prefabricated shed adds value to your property in addition to being an elegant solution for your storage needs. Other slick ways to add storage include creating a closet under staircases or having the living room ottoman double as a storage place. These storage spaces won’t be intrusive to your home and property.

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Home Maintenance Ben Soreff Home Maintenance Ben Soreff

What to Look For When Renovating an Older Home

Renovating an older home can be a lot of fun, but it can also be a lot of stress. There's nothing quite like the empowerment you feel in making an older home more modern. However, you also have to know what to look for when renovating older homes, choosing the specific projects to tackle, and then somehow keeping it all under budget.

Renovating an older home can be a lot of fun, but it can also be a lot of stress. There's nothing quite like the empowerment you feel in making an older home more modern. However, you also have to know what to look for when renovating older homes, choosing the specific projects to tackle, and then somehow keeping it all under budget.

Character to Build Around

Older homes are alluring to many people because they're in established and mature neighborhoods. They have great locations and have usually been around long enough for trees to grow up. There is also a unique charm to many older homes. It might be a quaint fireplace, bay windows, or just crown molding in the dining room. Always keep an eye out for such features. Don't just keep them. Build around them all you can and even accentuate them. In an age of cookie-cutter homes and prefabs flooding many markets, lots of buyers prefer something with individual style. You might just be one of them.

Age-Related Risks

Older homes may have stood the test of time, but how well have they really fared? Take a quick look inside any available circuit breakers to see the inspection and installation dates of the electrical system. Have a contractor get up on the roof, check the foundation for cracks and settling, get a technician to look over the HVAC system. Quite a bit of the home's infrastructure may need to be replaced just to bring a home up to code. Even if a lot of it can be grandfathered in, you might want to do it anyway just for peace of mind.

Opportunities for Modernization

After you decide on specific features to keep for character and deal with old-age problems a home might have, it's time to look for ways you can help bring the home into the modern age. This might be a sweeping overhaul of a whole floor by blowing out walls to introduce an open-concept living, but it can also be as practical as adding more electrical outlets, Wi-Fi, and USB ports for recharging mobile electronics.

Give the Lawn a Facelift

After you’ve worked out the inside and are comfortable, don’t forget to update the outside too. If a sprinkler system isn’t already installed, then that might be the first thing you look into. Not only will it help the grass, but you can have other lines set up for flower beds and trees also. 

Whether you live there or you sell to someone else, the next residents will be happy you looked out for all of these. 

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