Showing posts with label Household. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Household. Show all posts

Monday, September 19, 2011

Do You Want to Save Some Money on Laundry Soap?

When we visited Minnesota this summer, one of our friends told me: I am making my own laundry soap and I save a lot of money.  She told me the basic ingredients but I didn’t write them down.  Then I remembered that I had watched a TV program where a big family also made their own soap.

To say the least, I was interested.  I looked up different recipes  on the internet and made my own soap:

Recipe for 64 loads of home-made laundry soap:

1 cup grated soap (you can use any left-over bar soap and grate it on the kitchen grater), or 1/3 bar Fels Naptha utility soap

½ washing soda (from Arm and Hammer; NOT baking soda)

½ cup borax powder

 2-gallon bucket

Heat 6 cups of water and melt 1 cup grated soap until well dissolved.  Add ½ cup washing soda and ½ cup borax, stir to resolve.  Remove from heat.  Pour 4 cups of hot water into the 2 gallon bucket.  Add soap mixture and stir.  Add 1 gallon plus 6 cups of water and stir (makes a total of 32 cups or 2 gallons liquid).

Let soap sit for about 24 hours to make it gel.  Put detergent into covered containers like mason jars or empty detergent bottle.  Use ½ cup per load.

Here is a step by step approach in pictures from the Family Homestead.

Your laundry will be clean and have a fresh smell, without any fragrance.  For white clothes to be whiter, you can add ¼ - ½ tsp. of bluing liquid.

By drying your clothes with dryer balls,  you can avoid any softener additions since the balls take away static cling.  I bought mine for less than $5.00 at Bed, Bath and Beyond.

As for the cost of the laundry soap:
1 box of washing Soda (55oz.)  $3.09
1 box of Borax Bleach (76oz.)   $4.19
1 bottle of Mrs. Stewarts Bluing liquid (8oz.)  $2.69
soap left-over $0.03
total $10

For 10 dollars I have soap for 64 loads of laundry plus the many more mixtures I will concoct in the future.  According to the Family Homestead website it costs about 1 penny per load compared to 15 cents of the average bought detergent.

How’s that for saving money?