My Great Grandma Alma was a young woman during the Great Depression and a young mother during WWII. Her daughter, my grandma was a housewife, my mom was a housewife and now I am too. Although all of us housewives have to make sacrifices to afford to stay home, we also save a fortune if we do it right.
Great grandma taught me some of the essentials of being a great housewife when I was just a pre-teen and how she survived the Great Depression by being smart with what she had. Here are 9 things my grandma never threw away. Save money and live greener with these clever vintage housewife tips....
Worn clothes/towels/sheets
Never pitch fabric because you can always use it for something new. In grandma's time, ladies sewed dresses from beautifully printed feed and flour sacks or whipped up a little girl's dress from her mother's old dress.
A man's suit could be cut and sewn to make one for a lady and any remaining scraps would become an heirloom quilt. Today, most of us won't be hacking up hubby's old suit to make one for ourselves but we can still apply this make-do and mend mentality. Learn basic sewing repairs to extend your family's wardrobe.
I've rescued so many pairs of my husband's jeans with a new zipper or hem, darned a favorite sweater for myself and my sister and made a big stack of great dish rags with threadbare towels. Even an old sheet can be sewn into new pillow cases or a little summer dress.
I used old sheets and scrap fabric to make some much loved Christmas gifts for my kids last fall and they didn't cost a penny. I made giant Nessie stuffed animals, softie dolls, furnished a dollhouse and sewed the entire 1959 Barbie wardrobe with a bunch of fabric scraps.
Aluminum foil
Depending on the first-time use, some foil may be beyond a second life but if it can be rinsed off, use it again! Re-use foil to cover left overs more than once or wad it up, stick it in a potato or onion bag and you have a great pan scrubber that you didn't have to buy.
One winter, our car wouldn't start so my husband popped the hood to find that the battery terminals weren't looking so hot. He used a small wad of tin foil to scrub the corrosion off the terminals and the car fired right up and ran without any problems.
Buttons on shirts
Even in 2016, buttons are expensive! With a 50% off coupon, I'll easily spend $1 or more for a lousy pack of 4 buttons. Thanks to grandma, I never throw away worn clothes that still have their buttons.
Re-use buttons on clothes you've sewn yourself or to replace lost buttons. I also take zippers from worn jeans, pants and dresses. With a good stock of buttons in a jar, you'll rarely need to buy any, which brings me to our next no-pitch item
Jars, boxes, jugs or any container
Great grandma must have been quite the jar hoarder because the jar obsession has passed down to my grandma, my mother and now me. We rarely pitch a jar, be it glass or plastic, big or small!
Use jars for spices and grains in the kitchen, to hold your hair ties, q-tips and cotton balls in the bathroom. My husband has jars of screws and nails in his workshop and I use them in my sewing room, cleaning cabinet and of course, one with holes in the lid so the kids can catch critters in the summer. Decorate jars so you can keep them out in the open and no one will guess that they may have deemed them ready for the trash can.
Mason jars are now selling for a pretty penny, especially the colored vintage looking ones. Color your own for a trendy look on a dime store budget. My mom made her own Moroccan inspired lanterns from old spaghetti sauce jars.
Save boxes as well. Shoe boxes are worth their weight in gold in my house. We use them for our craft supplies, snack organizers in the pantry, holiday decor storage and kids school projects. Break boxes down to store flat, if you're low on space.
Bones from a chicken or cut of meat | Veggie Scraps
My family loves a rotisserie chicken or nice roast for dinner and the left-over bones make wonderful stock. A box of chicken stock costs around $2-3 at my local grocery stores but it's easy to make your own for free.
a freezer bag in the freezer and toss veggie scraps and chicken carcasses in the bag. When you're ready for a great soup this winter, toss the contents in a pot of water, season with herbs, salt and pepper. In the Great Depression house, not a scrap of food was wasted.
A Diaper
This one won't be for everyone but the truth is, Great grandma never threw away a diaper because she used cloth. When my daughter was born, I was a stay at home mom with plenty of extra time for laundry so we decided to give it a shot and try cloth diapers to save money like grandma used to do.
Just shake solids into the toilet and flush away and have enough on hand to wash about every two days. Stains are quickly bleached away by hanging in the sun. We saved a fortune and we never added a diaper to the landfills. And a fluffy cloth diapered butt is so cute!
Now that my kids have outgrown their diapers, we've sold the ones in good shape on Craigslist and saved the rest for great cleaning rags.
Bacon fat
To this day, many of my family members hang on to bacon fat. Oil and lard costs money so why pitch that flavorful, wonderful bacon grease? Keep one of those recycled glass jars in the kitchen to store bacon fat. Add it to gravy, soup, cornbread, potato salad and potato cakes. Bacon fat keeps in the fridge for a month.
Newspaper
My home was built in 1930 and we've found old newspaper in the walls as insulation! Grandma may have used newspaper for : gift wrap (use the funnies!) glass cleaner, storing breakables, compost, starting seeds, make a pinata, packaging material in the mail, pet cage liner or to start a fire
Soap scraps
Those pointless little slivers from a soap bar can still be put to use. Put the scraps of bar soap in an old pantyhose leg or worn out stocking and tie it off. Stick it by the sink for kids (who, in my house use way too much liquid soap) or next to the garden sink.
Fantastic tips!!! I really need to step up my game and incorporate some of these steps into my routine!!!
ReplyDeleteThis is good stuff! We also reuse ziploc bags. We couldn't get any on Africa, so we always washed and reused them. They were gold! The extra fun part is after washing, when they're wet, they will stick to a wall and dry that way.
ReplyDeletemy mom re-uses ziploc bags too and she's gotten me to start also. They're definitely good for more than one use, most of them time!
DeleteI love this post! My beau and I were just talking about his grandfather and how growing up during the depression shaped the way he was as an adult. Like your great grandmother, he saved most everything and found uses for most everything he saved. There is so much that we can learn from folks of that generation, not just to save money but to live more mindfully and without so much waste.
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised at how many of these things I already do, like saving jars and buttons and bacon fat, and I am excited to give the others a try!
When I had guinea pigs, I lined their cages with newspaper and shredded it up for bedding. I had to change it more often than the store bought bedding because it wasn't as absorbent, but it was worth not having to buy any at the pet store. That can get expensive
ReplyDeleteinstead of trashing the used paper when you clean out the pet cages, lay it around your garden plants and cover with mulch. Voila, fertilizer and weed prevention!
DeleteGreat advice!
ReplyDeleteThis is the true spirit of home economics and I really wish it would make a come back. Nice post.
ReplyDeleteThese are great tips! When I go camping, they use those laundry tablet nets with soap slivers in them in a similar way!x
ReplyDeleteSoap scraps are great for marking fabric when you're sewing. Let them get dry and they leave a nice thin line that always washes out.
ReplyDeleteThat's a spectacular idea!! Thank you for sharing!
DeleteLove this. We started saving jars too, especially the peanut butter ones. They are awesome to reuse for paint and spices we buy in bulk.
ReplyDeleteI just threw a sheet out. I wish I had seen this first. :(
These tips are really fantastic, and I just adore the dollhouse and barbie outfit you made!
ReplyDeleteGreat tips.. We are so wasteful in this generation we live in.
ReplyDeleteYou can also-- when your soap gets almost used up..just a thin sliver, lay it on top of your new bar of soap[wet the new bar first] .Lay in your soap dish, and the next day, it has stuck to it. I didn't come up with this, I read it on another blog. But since doing this, I have not thrown away any soap..
Love the things you made from scraps.Adorable.
I've been doing that with soap slivers for decades now. Just seemed like common sense. 'course I'm cheap so I can't stand to see something still usable go to waste.
DeleteTerrific post and trip down memory lane. My grandmothers, numerous elderly relatives and neighbours alike all came rushing back to me (I should mention, thankfully, both of my grandmas are still alive) in this list. On top of the sorts of things mentioned here, some others that I firmly remember these people in my life saving.reusing when I was a child include any sort of resemble food tin (such as Christmas cookie tin), zip-lock bags, the plastic tabs on loaves of bread, twist ties and rubber bands, paper bags, and hotel toiletries.
ReplyDelete♥ Jessica
Fantastic tips! I keep my bacon fat in the freezer, and it keeps pretty well for quite a long time. It lends too tasty a flavor to just pitch it!
ReplyDeleteI am now the Grandma and I save everything.Jars,boxes,bags,etc.I bought a 'soap saver' to remake soap slivers into bars.I am probably the one buying your used diapers at yard sales and online since my daughter uses disposable.Nothing beats a good old fashioned diaper for dusting!
ReplyDeleteI just stumbled upon your blog through Pinterest and I am really loving it! I feel like we're long lost vintage friends :) We are doing a year of not spending this year (eek!) so these tips are very helpful. Thank you! http://www.superbusyathome.com/welcome/2016/12/16/the-year-of-notspending
ReplyDeleteMy Momma always saved soap scraps. She would wet it a little & fill holes in the wall long before Pinterest. Also, shed take some with us wherever we went because some restrooms didn't have soap. Also, she saved her bacon grease, buttons, & old socks, tee shirts etc for grease rags for my Dad outside, cleaning rags inside,& any mess you just wanted to scoop up & throw away.
ReplyDeleteI have always saved old pillow cases and sheets to use for sewing. Thanks for all your tips
ReplyDeleteOne more comment about slivers of soap. When the soap gets too small to use, drop it into a small plastic glass with a little water. It will melt into liquid soap overnight so you can get one more shower using the liquid soap. I also pour larger containers of shampoo and conditioner into travel size plastic containers for use in the shower. Even if you drop or spill, it will only be just a little spill instead of a full sized container going down the drain.
ReplyDeleteI loved your tips. I am a plus size lady and I like to wear dresses but the price for a new dress is outranges so I buy a lot of sheets from thrift stores and I have beautiful dresses for almost nothing. I have been able to find patterns and anything else I need at thrift stores also.
ReplyDeleteI love this!!!
DeleteI recall wool socks being darned, and if they were no longer repairable, they became puppets. And what about the food... any fruit was made into a dessert (cobbler or slice). Banana into banana bread - everyone knows, but not often do you hear people making simple apple crisp anymore. Leftover meat was sometimes ground and used in Sheppard's Pie (my favorite) or soups. My mom baked lots of bread. But any 2 day old bread was made into all sorts of things: bread crumbs, croutons, breakfast casseroles, french toast... Oh the bacon fat.. yes! buttons, bread ties, zip locs, prescription bottles, jars, containers, plastic grocery bags, paper bags, hotel soaps and shampoos, lol. Yes all true and all in my house today!
ReplyDeleteThe prescription bottles are great for your sewing box. They are great for storing needles, pins, and buttons to keep them out of little ones mouths because of their child proof caps.
DeleteMy mother saved plastic bread bag to store home made tortillas, or in a pinch; she would slit the bag up one side to use to cover her head during a rain storm to get to and from the car outside. Our ancestors were the best recyclers!
ReplyDeleteI use bread bags for the used kitty litter when cleaning the box. Also use it in container for scraps what will be used for compost in garden.
DeleteI use/hunt down old sheets to crochet into rugs, place mats, baskets, etc. White ones cane be dyed colors. Or, splatter paint on them before making into stripes. If I have stains on clothes that won't come out, I paint little designs over them...a whole new look. I pretty much do most of the above also :-)
ReplyDeleteI love these! I learned so much! I have been doing some of these for most of my life, but it is always good to learn more!!!
ReplyDeleteI love these ideas. Good to see people still put it into practice. I was a stay at home mom and still do a lot of those things today. I despise packaging and everyday it seems I still run into it.I still make my own onion soup mix, hamburger helper and shaken bake. When I throw my meat/chicken bones in a bag I also add the scrap carrots that I peeled,onion skins, ends of beans etc. It all goes into the stock pot.what a heavenly smell.as there is now just the two of us most of the time there seems to be leftover roasts of beef and pork and sometimes chicken and gravy. They all go into a freezer bag together and when the bag is almost full I turn it into a simple shepherds pie. I usually add some peas and I always freeze my leftover mashed potatoes so i have a wonderful topping. Simple and nothing is wasted. I put all in the fridge overnight to defrost. If I have no potatoes in freezer I will make a top pie crust or the other alternative is that I can potatoes in the fall and I will open a jar and slice them over the top and add a little bit of the bacon grease spread on top.
ReplyDeleteI loved reading this! My mother was not like this AT ALL. But my father's mother was. She sewed crocheted, knitted. She could take a cheap cut of meat and cook it so it melted in your mouth!! My mother didn't get along with her to well, so I really didn't see her too often. But I have wonderful memories of her, and this brought them all back. THANKS!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for this article. Being a baby boomer, my grandma was born in the 1800s. So I inherited many things I learned from her. Now my challenge is to save the planet from all the waste especially plastic.
ReplyDeleteAlso a word about the Barbie clothes. I still have my doll but no longer have her gorgeous wardrobe that my mom sewed for my Christmas present.the tiny clothes were made from sewing scraps for clothes that she had made for my sisters and I. I would give anything to have them now. Never underestimate the value of something like that for a child.
Love these! I also have giant button bowl. Instead of matching missing buttons on cardigan, jacket or favorite blouse, next time try finding 5 or 6 very different buttons and replace all for fun, unique, eclectic look.
ReplyDeletePop the saved rinds of parmesan & romano cheese into your next pot of stew or pasta sauce. Yummy.
Any old bottle or jar or tea tin can be used to hold handful of wildflowers or garden roses to brighten up someone's day. I've even used an old blue milk of magnesia bottle (label off, lol) just because so pretty. If have small creamer with chip in it, chip will be hidden by blossoms and look pretty on sill over your kitchen or bathroom sink, or next to guest bed.
Save old worn out cotton socks (my husbands big white ones best) in your cleaning rag pile. Wear them when dusting
to get the baseboards & corners clean without bending over!
I have long cardboard box that stood on end, put criss cross cardboard liquor separator in bottom, and stand wrapping paper up it it. Fits nicely in corner of closet.
Any small scraps of wrapping paper can keep in drawer, use when need small piece to cover or wrap jewelry boxes.
Leave a big glass bowl out with coils of ribbons in it, looks pretty and don't have to hunt down the ribbon when needed.
I have large old glass vase in bedroom with all my crinkley scarfs, twisted & curled up into balls. Pretty, and is easy to find the one you want.
That's all I can think of for now.
; >
Single socks can also be used as a "sleeve" on a bottle of olive oil...no drips
DeleteLove these! I also have giant button bowl. Instead of matching missing buttons on cardigan, jacket or favorite blouse, next time try finding 5 or 6 very different buttons and replace all for fun, unique, eclectic look.
ReplyDeletePop the saved rinds of parmesan & romano cheese into your next pot of stew or pasta sauce. Yummy.
Any old bottle or jar or tea tin can be used to hold handful of wildflowers or garden roses to brighten up someone's day. I've even used an old blue milk of magnesia bottle (label off, lol) just because so pretty. If have small creamer with chip in it, chip will be hidden by blossoms and look pretty on sill over your kitchen or bathroom sink, or next to guest bed.
Save old worn out cotton socks (my husbands big white ones best) in your cleaning rag pile. Wear them when dusting
to get the baseboards & corners clean without bending over!
I have long cardboard box that stood on end, put criss cross cardboard liquor separator in bottom, and stand wrapping paper up it it. Fits nicely in corner of closet.
Any small scraps of wrapping paper can keep in drawer, use when need small piece to cover or wrap jewelry boxes.
Leave a big glass bowl out with coils of ribbons in it, looks pretty and don't have to hunt down the ribbon when needed.
I have large old glass vase in bedroom with all my crinkley scarfs, twisted & curled up into balls. Pretty, and is easy to find the one you want.
That's all I can think of for now.
; >
Okay, now...
ReplyDeleteYou can't just mention Moroccan-inspired lanterns and not include a picture??
I use plastic bread bags and plastic bags from grocery store for kitty litter & compost. I use a coffee container to store the compost from kitchen scraps. Then I add this to compost for garden outside. This year I will be storing compost in cellar for winter
ReplyDeleteI keep my used Brillo pads in the freezer, so they won't rust. Also, used bread bags work great for using to put chops and chicken in to shake and coat with bread or cracker crumbs and spices.
ReplyDeleteWas very happy to read all the comments. I chuckled at the reference to the used nappies. I still have a supply from my children (youngest is now 35) Because they have been washed so many times there is very little lint left in them so they make great polishing cloths. I had them hidden so that they didn't get used to wrap motorbike parts etc! I keep all the threads and tiny pieces of cloth, wool etc from all my makings and use for cushion stuffing. much comfier that the wimpy polyester filling that the shops sell. I reuse most packaging I receive, including at my shop. Customers are happy about this. I have a slow clothing group. This winter we made slippers from old woollen jumpers, felted. I found a woollen bed underlay at the op shop which also worked well for the slippers and will supply my family for quite some time to come. This week we looked at ideas for wrapping our Christmas gifts with reusable wrapping - cloth, boxes etc. My passion is textiles so I love restructuring old garments, making do and repurposing. All of our comments are about not wasting our precious resources, not being greedy, and finding pleasure in what is real in our lives. Thankyou all for sharing your thoughts, they have reminded me of a few things I can still do. Trish (folks are welcome to email me re textile reusing etc.)
ReplyDeletetrish.stannus@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteSo happy to see you use the word funnies - my daddy always called them that and so do I! Thanks for some great tips - glad I'm following you!
ReplyDeleteH-mmm, let me see...your GREATGRANDmother was a young woman during the depression and a young mother during WWII. My MOTHER was a young woman during the depression and young mother right at the end of WWII. I guess that makes me very old and you very young. �� But regardless, the useful and thrifty ways of previous generations have been passed down to us both. Mom taught me all those economies and more. I have to 'fess up, I did find her habit of wadding up aluminum foil annoying when I was (much) younger but today I'm still using her 65 year-old Revere Wear pots and pans and if I have it, (I don't buy it often), I scrub them with used aluminum foil. Sheilamay mentioned the word, "funnies". My dad called them "funny papers" - very nostalgic. He's been gone for 36 years and I still miss him. Newspaper was always saved for making paper-mache projects or lighting a fire in the fireplace, brown paper supermarket bags were saved to cover schoolbooks and buttons and fabric were never thrown away. I'm a quilter/sewer and have tons of old buttons and loads of fabric scraps. I use modern electronic sewing machines as well as several 45 and 50 year-old vintage machines because they're beautiful, were made to last, sew perfectly and don't deserve to go to the dump. They were built before the concept of "planned obsolescence" became rampant. I take apart old clothes to make new or use in quilts. I never throw away jeans, I take out and save the zippers, the pockets, and use the fabric for something else. For example, waistbands can become durable dog collars. Most recently a jeans pant leg became an apron with pretty ruffled trim. I have a weakness for aprons because I'm rather a sloppy cook. I reuse old Christmas gift bags. If they come apart, I glue them back together or use them to cover a gift box lid. I cut out and use the prettiest parts of old Christmas cards to use for various Christmas decor items. I save wine corks - there are endless uses for them, from hotpads to Christmas decorations. Cardboard boxes of various sizes can be covered with colorful fabric scraps and used to store sewing notions. I prefer reusing glass jars because it's MUCH easier to determine the contents when they're in the 'fridge. Plastic cr*p needs to be labeled and that's just a bother, plus they're eventually landfill fodder & environmentally bad. Turkey and chicken carcasses are always thrown in a pot with leftover veggies, gravy and herbs to make a great soup stock. And every Thanksgiving when I cook a turkey, I ALWAYS start my veggies for stuffing by sauteing them in bacon fat, just like Mom did. The scent of bacon, onions, celery and thyme cooking always reminds me of her, Thanksgiving and watching the Thanksgiving day parade (on a black & white TV). She had me cooking my first Thanksgiving dinner at age twelve and had started me sewing at about age 8. She was the BEST!
ReplyDeleteMy Mom saved cottage cheeses containers.
ReplyDeleteLoads of great ideas! I do many of them. I don’t sew but donate/purchase many items from thrift stores. I use plastic bags from produce etc as gloves when I am cooking raw meats.
ReplyDeleteGreat tips, thanks!
ReplyDeleteI like refilling foaming soap dispensers. I dilute liquid soap or shampoo with about three parts water. The foam pump dispenses so little it last a long time, and it's still super effective. I want to do this with dish soap. The people I live with use waaaaayyyy too much. You could probably dissolve bar soap scraps in water and put that in a foaming pump.
Your mention of insulating with newspaper made me smile. My childhood home had papers from WWII insulating the attic. The funnies got way more page space than they do these days. There was a Disney strip in which Goofy decided to use spotlights instead of blackout curtains so he could spot enemy planes before they spotted him. What a trip.
I love this. I do all these things, which I learned from my parents who were raised during the Depression. We need to teach more of this to the next generations.
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When our only child was a baby, we found out she was allergic to something (been a long time and can NOT remember which chemical) in disposable diapers. She would get terrible rashes from them. Since she was mine, the youngest in the family, and the fact that she was so hard won, my family gifted us with a huge number of cloth diapers and underpants. We had so many diapers that I started using the extras for rolling bread and dumplings. I still use cloth diapers for doing that and for dusting and dish cloths. If it ain't broke LOL
ReplyDeleteI personally don't sew & have no desire to, however I have friends who do so I trade items I don't use for their talents. I do save old clothing & bedding etc. for friends who quilt,also for cleaning/painting rags & dog bedding. My friend who quilts gives me excess coleslaw & macaroni salad from her husband's business.
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