T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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403.1 | streching soaps... | JARETH::JARETH::LEWIS | | Wed Oct 10 1990 13:56 | 12 |
| I remember reading some tips in a magazine a few years ago. The ones
that I remember are:
1) Carefully measure laundry detergent and such - you'll use less
than by eye-balling it.
2) Save your old shampoo bottle; dump half of the new bottle in it and
fill both with water. You'll get two bottles for the price of one and
it will work just fine.
Little ideas - hope they help.
|
403.2 | saving ideas | ASDS::GORING | | Wed Oct 10 1990 14:05 | 13 |
| I too could benefit from the tips that you'll proably collect here
but here's my tips.
- try buying only essential items
- make planned shopping trips for food, baby, household & hygiene
rather than one stop. I believe this saves us money and of course
time which is precious
- make meals at home with an occasonial treat to Kentucky or Chinese
- Use coupons where possible. I am not as good in this area yet
Hope this helps
-clotelle
|
403.3 | | TCC::HEFFEL | If I were a whale, I'd beach myself! | Wed Oct 10 1990 14:12 | 35 |
| A bit time consuming, but not all that difficult (much easier than most
people think) is make your or your child's clothes.
I recently lost 40 pounds and had to completely replace my wardrobe.
Everything from underwear to my winter coat. (I went from a size 16 to a
size 4.) Thats EXPENSIVE! I decided to dust off the sewing machine. I started
by making simple summer dresses for myself. At the end of the summer, I
started sewing for Katie. Katie is 16 months old. I've made a ton of dresses,
jumpers and jumpsuits. I buy a few patterns and use them over and over varying
details such as pockets, trims, appliques, long or short sleeves to get some
variety. At Katie's age, NOTHING takes more than a yard and half and most things
only take about a yard. You can often find pieces of material of this size on
the remnant table for next to nothing. I find I can make outfits that stores
are charging $20-35 dollars for for well under $10 -- sometimes under $5. (I
made a jumper out of a piece of madras plaid cotton that cost 99 cents, a zipper
that cost 90 cents, and some left over thread I had from another project! You
can't beat that with a stick!)
How time consuming is it? Well not really that bad. A jumper or dress
usually takes about 1 1/2 hours from than time I cut out the material until I
finish the last hem. A jumpsuit takes a little longer, another 20 minutes to
1/2 hour becuase of the work that goes into making a snap crotch. (Boy, I'll
be happy when I can just sew a seam there!)
Another plus for me is that I have more variety in what I chose. I'm
not stuck with the pinks and lavenders of the "traditional" girls wear or the
ghastly neons of the "trendy" girls wear. (No offense to anyone who likes
those things, they just aren't my cup of tea.) I can make a jumpsuit out of
primary colored dinosaur material, or a jumper out of madras or a dress out of
a brown flowered cotton material. And even though the things I make are easy
(I am getting more adventuresome with MY stuff, but since Katie's stuff will be
worn for a few months at most, simplicity is the watchword here) I constantly
get complements on her clothes.
Tracey
|
403.4 | 2 ideas | MAMTS5::MWANNEMACHER | let us pray to Him | Wed Oct 10 1990 14:25 | 10 |
| 1) (for next spring) Grow your own garden.
2) Get clothes at yard sales-I bought 8 winter courdoroy shirts for 50
cents a piece at a yard sale and most of them are like brand new.
Peace,
Mike
|
403.5 | a few more ideas... | STIKEE::CREAN | | Wed Oct 10 1990 14:30 | 37 |
| Don't know if these will help, but here's what we do:
o shop with a list and only buy what's on the list
o shop the sales
o use coupons or buy store-brands or generics
o eat at home
o cook in large quantities & freeze the extras (this was a big savings
for us - instead of eating out when we didn't feel like cooking,
we can just grab something out of the freezer)
o be more conscientous about using leftovers (add to soups, stews, save
for lunches the following day, freeze for quickie meals)
o buy large-economy size (check the unit price to make sure it's a
good deal)
We also had to evaluate the areas where we were being wasteful. Here are some
of the improvements we tried to make:
o use plastic, resealable containers for sandwiches & leftovers
(instead of plastic bags).
o use a dishrag instead of paper towels
o use cloth napkins instead of paper
o when peeling vegetables, use bowl instead of paper towels
o use insulated, zippered lunch bags instead of paper bags
o use grocery bags for garbage instead of plastic bags
Other savings around the house:
o turn of lights, appliances when not in use (my husband used to leave
the TV on when would go to do something else)
o run the dishwasher & washing maching in the evening (someone told me
that the rates are cheaper at that time, although I've never verified
it).
o make long-distance phone calls when the rates are cheapest.
o when taking items out of the refrigerator - take all the items you
need at one time instead of opening & closing the door many times
- Terry
|
403.6 | moderator alert | POWDML::SATOW | | Wed Oct 10 1990 14:37 | 11 |
| While I'm sure everyone agrees that this topic is of general interest, please
remember that the subject of this notesfile is Parenting. Please keep your
comments relevant to aspects of saving money that are relevant to parenting,
not just saving money in general.
You might also try the CONSUMER notesfile.
Thanks
Clay Satow
co-moderator
|
403.7 | here's a couple ideas | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Wed Oct 10 1990 14:40 | 30 |
| Great...this is MY topic....
Use coupons whenever possible. BUT: don't even cut them out for things
that you don't use else chance's are you haven't saved a cent.
Make special trips to stores that you know have the best prices on
things that you use consistently and in volume. For example, I
*know* that Stop-n-Shop in Marlboro has the best 4.5oz baby food
and 13oz concentrated formula prices. So, even though it's out of
my way, I went there once a month and stocked up on those items.
Or, I buy lots of boxes of Prince pasta/macaroni when it goes on
sale for 4/$1.
Setback your thermostat at night during heating months...also during
the day, if you're not home. Also, the highest we set it anyways
is about 68 degrees...it really isn't cold and that's what slippers
and sweaters are made for! This is a big area for potential savings
this winter if you heat by oil.
Monitor your hot water usage...saves $$ and water. Install "shower
saver" shower heads, don't run the extra-heavy duty dishwasher cycle,
etc.
Dry laundry on the line (okay, next summer!).
Bake/cook whatever you can in a toaster oven (much cheaper to heat
the smaller space).
That's a few from the ultimate cheapie....carol
|
403.8 | I was brought up to save...... | POWDML::OCG_TEMP | | Wed Oct 10 1990 14:43 | 46 |
| I agree whole heartedly with .3. I also will be making my son's
clothes (as soon as he grows out of the clothes that he got as gifts
when he was born) and I know I will be saving an awful lot of money by
doing so. I made all my maternity clothes and saved hundreds. I've
already made my son one jump suit and it cost me about $10 (that's
because of the initial cost of the pattern which can be used a dozen or
so times). .3 mentioned the time it takes to put in a snap crotch, I
agree, I put a snap crotch in my son's jumpsuit and it took me over an
hour to do so because I had to line the snaps up. When I mentioned
this to my mother, she told me to buy the snap tape. It costs about
$3.98/yd. but when you figure out how much it costs for the seam
binding and the snaps and all the time it takes to put the snaps on, it
really comes out to be more economical. It takes just as long to sew
on the snap tape as it would to sew on the seam binding because you use
it in place of the seam binding.
Another way to save some money is to make your own baby food. Cook the
meals you normally would for your family only don't season a small
portion of what you are cooking. Put the unseasoned portion in your
food processor or blendor and voila, baby food that has no
preservatives or additives and it's much better for the baby too. You
can do this with fruits too by cooking them a little bit first.
Also, don't buy the Gerber or Beechnut juices, they're way too
expensive. You can buy 100% fruit juice and dilute it with water. I buy
the generic brand apple juice for my 2 month old son and dilute it 1
part apple juice to 3 parts water. The pediatrician recommened this,
so I guess it's o.k. Also, there's nothing in 100% fruit juice except
the juice of the fruit.
Powdered formula averages out to be a whole lot cheaper than the
liquid, it just takes a little bit more time to prepare. I usually
boil a whole pot of water and fill all my bottles and have them all
ready in advance so all I have to do when I'm ready to feed my son is
add the formula to the water. This is also good for travelling because
you don't have to worry about the unrefrigerated formula spoiling before
you use it up. I usually take along a couple of bottles of water and
the can of formula. It also doesn't stain the baby's clothes like the
liquid stuff does and this saves on stain remover for the laundry.
I could go on for days on how to save money (when your boyfriend is out
of work and you're a contract worker and don't know if you're going to
have a job yourself the following day, you're constantly looking for
ways to save a buck!) but I'll stop now and if you want, I'll send more
ideas via vaxmail.
Lori B.
|
403.9 | | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Thu Oct 11 1990 10:06 | 10 |
| Although I sew, I have limited time, so I haven't made any clothese for
Ryan. I do, however, regularly shop at a "gently used" clothing shop
for kids, and have gotten really good bargains. Lots OshKosh overalls
for $4.50-$5.00, that are good as new. The best though, was a snowsuit
last winter that my sister bought for $18.50 - I saw the same one for
$74!
Also consider recycling your kids' clothes when outgrown. Used clothing
shops vary - some give credit, or cash, or send you a check when the
items sell.
|
403.10 | some more tips | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Thu Oct 11 1990 10:56 | 65 |
| Here are some of the things that work for me:
I agree with the tag sales for clothing and such. Our kids'
clothes budget has been close to zero since my mother-in-law
started hounding tag sales for sweaters, pants, shirts, t-shirts,
and so on for Kat, Steven, and now David. We get almost
everything except shoes, underwear, and coats there.
Make sure you check each piece over carefully for stains, tears,
missing buttons, and so on. Work all the zippers; frequently a
nice jacket or pair of pants will be on sale because the zipper's
broken. If you're buying bsby clothes with snaps up the legs,
test the snaps. With sweaters, check for snags and runs. Check
the underarm seams since that's where wear often shows first.
If the garment does have a minor defect, you might still want to
buy it with repair in mind. Offer them less for it. Offer them a
pittance -- five cents, ten cents. Odds are they'll take you up
on it just to get the stuff out of the house.
Learn to make repairs -- you can stitch up a torn seam, replace
buttons and snaps, and so on. Tag sales are a good source for new
buttons and so on. Be creative. I once got a lovely vinyl jacket
for Kat that cost me a nickel because it had a three-cornered tear
in the middle of the back. I put one of those "hot dot" adhesive
flourescent patches over it (right where I would have put it
anyway) and it was good as new.
Other things you can get easily at tag sales are extra dishes,
especially cooking utinsels, and toys. Make sure all the parts
are there and that they are either clean or washable. Open up the
battery compartments of electronic toys to make sure the batteries
haven't leaked.
Cancel your book and record clubs -- if you're like me, you
frequently buy things that look interesting but you don't really
want. Tag sales are also a good place to stock up on books and
records, especially popular music, kids' books and genre fiction.
Rediscover your library -- all you could read and usually free, or
a minimal yearly fee. Most public libraries have record and even
CD sections where you can check out music to listen to at home.
Coupons -- I've never found them worth the effort since they're
generally for brand names that are already astronomically marked
up and the house or generic brands even after double coupons are
frequently cheaper.
Cook more. Generally the more processing that goes into a
product, the higher its price. For instance, at Monday night's
shopping I was looking at some packages of flavored pasta that
were $1.29 for a 10-oz. serving. For $1 I could get two packages
of Pasta Mia pasta (I've found that linguine goes a little farther
than spaghetti and a lot farther than macaroni) to make three
10-oz. servings.
Using newspaper ads, plan your week's menu ahead of time. Focus
on things that are on sale and on things you already have on hand.
Write down a shopping list of everything you need and don't buy
anything that's not on the list. Go only once a week.
Don't buy snack foods like candy, cookies, chips, and so on. A
pound of carrots costs .49 and, converted to carrot sticks, will
last a family of four for a week, and your health will be better.
--bonnie
|
403.11 | Save $ by reducing gas/oil consumption... | DEMON::DEMON::CHALMERS | Ski or die... | Thu Oct 11 1990 12:26 | 18 |
| With the price of gasoline and home heating oil going up, and with no
end in sight, here's a couple of tips that should show substantial
savings:
- Consolidate or eliminate car trips. Plan your errands ahead of
time, so that you can do things in one or two trips instead of 3 or 4.
- If you have oil heat, consider installing an automatic
thermostat. Prices range from $30-$100+, depending on complexity and
features, although some oil companies offer and install them free as
incentives for signing up with them. It doesn't make sense to heat a
house while nobody's home. On weekdays, we have ours set to warm the
house to 68 at approx 6:30 a.m., drop to 60 at approx 8:30 a.m., come
back up to 68 at approx 5:00 p.m., and drop to 62 or 64 at approx 10:00
p.m. On weekends, we set a different schedule, one that corresponds to
our typical activity. Since we've had ours, our oil consumption has
dropped by approx 15-20%.
|
403.12 | thanks. | SCARGO::GALPIN | | Thu Oct 11 1990 12:55 | 6 |
| Thank you all for responding to my request. So many of them are
common sense, so it shouldn't be hard to do. I'll extract these
replies out and start memorizing them!
Diane
|
403.13 | our ways... | CRONIC::ORTH | | Thu Oct 11 1990 15:40 | 56 |
| I second, third and fourth the idea of garage sales! My wife is a
voracious "saler" and our children have heaps of name brand clothes for
a song. Most are beautiful. Some have a bit more wear, or tiny stains,
but if they're wearing them out to play in the mud.....who cares???
We also have a generous Great Grandma who sends oodles of clothes that
she buys for a song, too. Closeouts, the dirty clothes that fell on the
floor in the stockroom and got walked on, things that are a bit
irregular (ok, so some of them are definietly more "irregular" than
others!) We can use most all of it. Some is unusable, but not much. If
she finds an excellent buy, she'll buy a dozen and send 'em all (we
probably have about...no kidding....25 winter hats for kids. She got
'em for a nickel each, and they're all grogeous!) We do share with
folks from our church, and get given bags (as in *huge*) of clothing
very frequently. We buy shoes, and that's about all. Have never yet
bought a jacket, snowsuit, etc. at full price (although have been given
some of these as gifts). I second Bonnie....check 'em out carefully.
Check especially an item that appears virtually brand new, that is the
same size and season as the other clothing offered. There may be
something wrong with it that makes it unwearable (My wife bought some
beautiful turtelnecks for our son, and only after trying to squeeze his
poor little head unsuccesfully through the hole, which was *incredibly*
small for the size shirt, did she realize why they were dirt cheap!).
Also second the turning the heat down. If you have an infant in the
house, do not think you must set your thermostat to "roast". Dress the
baby as you are dressed (assuming you are comfortable!) and let it be
at that. Be aware that a basically statinary infant and a moving-around
adult may need different layers of clothing. If the baby doesn't fuss,
then he/she probably isn't cold. Also, particulary in older or less
well insulated houses, watch for drafts, particularly on the floor. Lay
down on the floor yourself and see what it feels like. It's usually
considerably cooler there, than up where your head is! (hot air rising,
as it does). We keep our thermostat at 55 all night on the first floor
(where our bedroom is, but we have a nice warm waterbed :-) ), and 60
up in the kid's rooms. They also wear pajamas with blanket sleepers
over top of them. They stay nice and toasty. During the day, we turn it
up to about 64-65. And wear lots of layers of clothing! The kids all have
nice warm fuzzy slippers ot keep feet warm. This is essential! If your
feet are cold, your whole body feels cold!
Others:
bake from scratch, as often as possible. My wife makes her own bread
and all other baked goods.
shop for the stuff on sale that week.
stretch meat by using more casseroles and meatless stuff. Pasta is
cheap (relatively), filling and good for you. And kids usually will eat
it.
Do you have a pet? When running the water in your sink to get it hot,
collect it in a jug while its still running cold, and fill the pet's
water dish. Or use it to fill a humidifier. Or to fill a pot for
boiling that pasta! By doing this, and being super conscious of how
much water we were wasting, we've cut about 10-15% off average water
bill.
Be creative! Get the kids involved! They can come up with some pretty
amazing suggestions!
--dave--
|
403.14 | used toys | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Thu Oct 11 1990 15:54 | 5 |
| Along with scouting clothing buys at garage sales...don't overlook
the toys! Children seem just as happy with a 50cent "previously-
loved" toy and can get a kick out of the bargain-hunting as well!
cj/
|
403.15 | more hints, mostly tactical | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Oct 12 1990 09:50 | 38 |
| One caution -- if you're not used to a frugal lifestyle, don't try
to implement a money-saving approach to housekeeping overnight.
You'll be overwhelmed. Work on one area for a week or two, until
you feel more comfortable with the idea of always thinking of
money first, and then add another for the next week, and so on.
While the shopping seems like the most obvious place to start,
it's also the hardest to manage. I was raised in this lifestyle,
with never enough money to go around, so I still do it on
automatic even now that we're more than comfortable -- and I still
make whopping mistakes. If you do find out you've wasted some
money that you could have saved, don't sweat it. Just note it as
a learning experience.
You might also try something else, perhaps the household-economy
stuff, before you really dig into the shopping.
And make sure that everybody in the household understands what
you're doing and agrees to pitch in. Sacrificing onesself to
protect the kids from knowing money is short isn't a good idea to
begin with. Not only does it deprive them of an opportunity to
contribute to the family and to learn how to handle a situation
like this, but it also doesn't work. One careless spendthrift kid
can wipe out months of savings in a weekend.
Something else that sometimes helps ease the transition is to
budget a small amount for "splurging" -- perhaps a family fund, or
perhaps a small amount for each individual to spend as they'd
like. If you do do this, make sure everybody understands that
that really is for spending on important frivolous items (in my
case, things like pens and notebooks and cute desk gadgets, even
though I must have a three-year supply stocked up), not for the
family budget. If one person thinks another should be generously
sacrificing this personal money to the family fund while the other
is cheerfully spending it on cotton candy, you've got the makings
of a big grudge.
--bonnie
|
403.16 | chart what you spend | WFOV12::LITEROVICH | | Fri Oct 12 1990 14:19 | 31 |
| Chart what you spend. Take a month and right down eveything you spend.
Yes it is time consuming when you start, howeve, you will be amazed at
where you money goes that you could cut.
We have been doing this for 5 years. When we first started we
documented every cup of coffee and pack of gum. This allowed us to get
our spending in line with our income. When we bought our house it
again helped us free up the money.
You can pick up an accounting journal almost anywhere. We use columns
like: Income, Mortgate/utilities/wood, food, clothing, medical, day
care, transportation, entertainment, contributions, gifts, misc. The
entertainment and gift columns were added later when we realized our
misc column was always out of sight. This was because the movies and
birthday gifts and everything was included. Now we take that out and
can see that we got a bit carried away at the video store this month.
Also dinners out go into the entertainment column instead of food
because we could easily eliminate going out to eat. We also see that
regardless of how much we spend going out we spend on an average the
same at the grocery store every month.
We also agreed not to spend money without the others approval. We
basically shop together for everything (our problem is we are both
shopaholics - My addiction rubbed off!!!) and we agree on most
purchases. We set a dollar limit every month on clothes. I don't go
out and spend $50 without consulting with him first and he doesn't
without consulting with me. This avoids the "You spent WHAT on WHAT?!"
type fights.
Kim
|
403.17 | Here's a couple | SLSTRN::HAY | | Fri Oct 12 1990 15:45 | 20 |
| You can try these with babies:
o buy and wash your own diapers
o make your own baby food.
i.e. Today (curious coincidence!) I decided to try making my
own squash. I cooked the squash, whipped it up with
a mixer, and put it in ice cube trays (3 cubes=1 jar).
Once frozen, you pop the cubes into a zip-lock freezer
bag, and take them out when needed. 1 squash cost me
.80; it made enough for 6 jars of food --- how does .13 sound
for a jar of baby food, as compared to .39 at the store?
Pretty good to me! Total time about 10 minutes (not including
cooking time when I was doing other things)
Other ideas:
o double coupons
o only wash clothes with a full load (though I'm real bad at this!)
|
403.18 | Sewing Does Not Pay! | CURIE::POLAKOFF | | Mon Oct 15 1990 11:22 | 37 |
|
I don't want to go down a rathole here, but I do take exception to the
recommendations that you try and SEW (from scratch), your kids
clothes.
I am a crackerjack sewer and I LOVE to sew. I find it relaxing.
However, I have NEVER found making clothes for Hannah to be economical.
First of all, patterns these days cost anywhere from $5-8 a piece.
Sure, you can reuse them a few times, but at some point, you will grow
tired of making the same outfit and your kid will get tired of wearing
the same style.
Also, it's true that you can find fabric remnants, but more often than
not, the yardage is not quite there (at least in my experience). I end
up buying fabric off the bolt, and fabric runs anywhere from $3-10 per
yard.
I think one CAN sew economical clothing for their child--but I also
think that one can find similiar clothing at a store like Raschel's for
similiar prices--without the labor involved.
I am currently making Hannah a pinwhale cordouroy jumper. The pattern
was $6.00. The fabric was $8.80 per yard. The thread and buttons were
$3.00. It has taken me--not including preshrinking and then ironing
the fabric--approx. 6 hours to make the jumper. This also does not
include hemming. Granted, if I make it again it will go faster--but
the bottom line is---I am doing it out of enjoyment--not out of
economy.
I could get a similiar jumper at Raschel's for half the price.
Regards,
Bonnie
|
403.19 | Electricity! | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Mon Oct 15 1990 12:08 | 25 |
| My electric bill has always been a doozy, so I do know now that if you
aviod the hours of 5am to 8 am, and 5pm to 8pm when using major
electrical appliances, you will lower your electric bill. Those are
the hours of highest usage, and thus highest rates! (they get you
coming and going don't they?)
So now I do laundry (electric dryer) only after 8pm, I set my
dishwasher on timer to go around midnight, TVs off if not actively
being watched, things like that. Of course lights off in unoccupied
rooms (that's been one of the hardest for the kids).
Coupons for things I will definately use, don't bother for the
processed foods etc., their only a temptation to try something new
that's uneconomical. Sales. Get items at their most cost effective
place, like shampoo at the drug store rather than the supermarket where
it costs more.
Of course, hand-me-downs. These get tougher as the kids get older
cause they start to actually wear things out. I've found if you get a
good brand name, however, certain items like shirts and jeans will last
through three boys! Thank you HealthTex!
Eat home cooked foods as much as possible, they are much more
economical.
|
403.20 | MORE IDEAS | CGVAX2::GALPIN | | Mon Oct 15 1990 13:10 | 17 |
| Keep those great ideas coming! Here are few things that I am
doing to stretch the dollars:
- Buy meat ends. I made some ham salad with ends and it is cheaper
than buying can ham.
- Buy gas on cash rather than credit
- This Ive' been doing for a while- recycle those copy papers from the
LN03. Instead of throwing them away or putting them into your local
recycle bin, bring them home. I use them as scrap paper, scratch pad
for my kids, etc. My oldest son loves them because my last name is
printed on the sheets and he likes to practice writing his last name or
just writing letters in general. Great, cheap educational toy!
Diane
|
403.21 | Check your town's rates | CSC32::WILCOX | Back in the High Life, Again | Mon Oct 15 1990 13:26 | 2 |
| Make sure you check with the utility company in your town as far as rates
go. In Colorado Springs there is no lower rate for off-peak useage.
|
403.22 | time-of-day electric rates are rare | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Oct 15 1990 14:22 | 12 |
| Almost no homeowners (or renters) have time-of-day sensitive rates.
Not because of local rate policies, but because of equipment. Normal
electric meters have no capacity to record when electricity was used,
just the total KWH between readings. Thus it makes no difference when
you run things.
In the last energy crunch there was a little experimentation with
installing residential time-of-day meters in a few localities, but it
is still quite rare. On the other hand, it is fairly common for large
commercial and industrial users to have time-of-day rates.
- Bruce
|
403.23 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Tue Oct 16 1990 06:11 | 8 |
| I used to have a timer on my hot water heater - it came on from 5am to
7am (morning showers for 3), and from 6pm to 9pm (dish washing/clothes
washing). Plus I had an insulating "blanket" around it, and it cut my
power bill in HALF ! I was very surprised to say the least.
Unfortunately, my current landlord won't let me modify the wiring. 8^(
Jerry ...
|
403.24 | | WFOV12::LITEROVICH | | Tue Oct 16 1990 08:47 | 7 |
| .23
Jerry, not to go down a rat hole - I really need to cut my electric
bill, was this for and electric water heater? I have the insulating
blanket and my electric bills are still over $80-90 (we only use
electric heat for the bathroom at bathtime and showertime, otherwise it
is wood heat).
|
403.25 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Oct 16 1990 11:13 | 3 |
| re .23:
Why can't you just turn down the thermostat on the water heater?
|
403.26 | "off peak" heating works | ISE004::MATTIA | | Tue Oct 16 1990 12:16 | 10 |
| RE: .24
We now have what is called "off peak" water heating, and it works. Our
electric bill was cut. I don't have specifics on it because my husband
monitored it. I don't know where you are, but here in NH, PSNH comes
out and checks out your water heater as it must be a certain size for
them to do it. Ours is 80 gals so we qualified, they attached a meter
and that's it. Call your electric company and check it out.
Donna
|
403.27 | No rate difference???? | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Tue Oct 16 1990 17:38 | 6 |
| My electric bill specifically states peak and off peak kilowatt rates,
and how much of each our household consumes. Our bill is based on
these two separate figures. Thus I am led to conclude that they somhow
monitor how much electricity is used during these two periods in my
house. How might I conclude otherwise? (this in regard to .22)
|
403.28 | too-low H2O temp? | PHAROS::PATTON | | Wed Oct 17 1990 09:33 | 12 |
| Re: the temperature setting on the water heater.
I remember reading that setting it at less than 120 or 130F (forget
which) could allow organisms to grow, similar to the ones that cause
Legionnaire's disease. Does anyone have any solid info on this, and
what the minimum temp. should be?
(We keep the water temp pretty low not only to save $ but to prevent
burns to our son, who loves to wash dishes by himself.)
Lucy
|
403.29 | | TCC::HEFFEL | That was Zen; This is Tao. | Wed Oct 17 1990 10:13 | 40 |
| Perhaps I should start another note on sewing for kids....
I *have* found that sewing really is economical for me. Part of it is
Katie's age and part of it is where and how I shop, I think.
Since Katie is only 17months old, she couldn't care less if I made
47 outfits out of the same pattern. :-) So my patterns probably go farther than
they would with an older child who actually cares what is on her.
Bonnie said that she can pay anywhere from $3-$10 a yard for material.
Well, I've made about 15-16 outfits so far and have not yet paid more than
$3/yard. I just made Katie 2 corduroy jumpsuits. I paid $1.88/yard for the
pinwhale cord. And it only took 1 1/4 (1 1/2?) yards for each suit. (My fabric
store frequently has remnants as large as 2 yards.) On these particular
outfits, I bought fancy buttons (Daisy kingdom animals) so I spent $1.99 for
the two buttons, but my more usual price for a sheet of buttons, is less than
$1.50 for a set of 5 buttons. And if I pick them up of the discontinued button
table, I can spend as little as 40 cents for 2-3 buttons. (Not only that, but
there is a ladies blouse factory outlet down the road that I can get a *full
cup* of buttons for 49 cents. (Yes, I can pick and choose so that I get
matching ones.) ) The fabric store that I shop at, routinely has patterns for
50%-60% off, so I usually spend ~$2.50 - $3.00 per pattern not $5-$8. I buy
lace when it is on sale. I got some pregathered eyelet lace for 33 cents a yard
a few weeks ago.
I agree with Bonnie that on some things, you can't make it as cheap.
Last night, I just bought (at an outlet store) three blouses for Katie. They
were $5-6. I *might* have able to make them that cheap, but it certainly
wouldn't have been worth the time. So things like Blouses, turtlenecks, shorts,
I buy at outlet stores or on sale. I reserve my sewing for the jumpers, dresses
and jumpsuits where I DO see a big difference.
I concede that there will probably be a time when Katie is too big to
use remnants for the cloth, yet small enough that she is not made the jump to
paying adult prices for clothes. Then it may not be economical to sew. But
right now it is.
Tracey
|
403.30 | depends what you compare to.. | CNTROL::STOLICNY | | Wed Oct 17 1990 10:30 | 12 |
| re: .29
Tracey,
The difference is that you're not within driving distance of
Raschel's!! It truly is an incredible place in terms of both
price, quality (well, most things), and selection. So, you're
comparing apples to oranges!
8-)!
Carol
|
403.31 | I agree with Tracey on this one | STIKEE::CREAN | | Wed Oct 17 1990 13:08 | 16 |
| I've been sewing for Cory since he was born (12 1/2 months ago !).
As long as I stick to the bargain fabrics, it's been more economical to make
rather than buy (and I live 5 minutes from Raschel's in Westboro). I've also
been able to use up many of my fabric scraps on Cory's clothes.
Part of the savings comes from buying "Puddle Jumper" patterns. They usually
encompass 4 sizes. I've found them at Rich's & Weintraubs for $3-$4 each.
Also, for the smaller sizes (under 2T), my sister-in-law gave me a book called
"Sewing for Baby". The pattern pieces mix/match so you can create something
a little different without too much effort. Cory can still wear the XL so
I'm still using them. If anyone wants more info on the book, just send me
mail.
- Terry
|
403.32 | electric rates . . . | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Wed Oct 17 1990 13:24 | 12 |
|
In re: .27
I certainly wasn't suggesting that _you_ don't have time-of-day based
rates. But some people might have misunderstood the original entry
(.19), and thought this would work for anyone. Most people have a
single flat rate, and don't have the type of meter to support a split
rate. Anyone in doubt can check their bill.
- Bruce
|
403.33 | Program your thermostat | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Wed Oct 17 1990 15:17 | 18 |
| I'm not sure if this has been mentioned already, but we installed a programmable
thermostat when we moved into our new home. You enter the time you wake up,
leave for work, return from work, and go to sleep (weekends are on a different
program), and what you want the temperature to be when you are home and awake,
and it calculates the time to come on so that you are comfortable when you are
home.
I can't really say if it has helped or not, but I suspect it is a BIG savings.
The new house is twice the square feet of the old house, and my bill is about
10% less than in my OLD house. I also called the electric company prior to
moving in, to find out what the bills were over the last year, and my August
bill (VERY hot month) was less than 1/3 of the prior year - of course our
habits may be very different than the previous owners too....
Kristen
P.S. I paid about $140 for mine, but you can get cheaper ones for about $65 to
$90.
|
403.34 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Fri Oct 19 1990 08:32 | 7 |
| re .24
Yes, it was for an electric 40gal water heater. The apartment was
total electric too. I also had a spare bedroom that I kept closed off,
since no one ever used it.
Jerry
|
403.35 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Fri Oct 19 1990 08:35 | 5 |
| I left the temp setting where it was, so the water would heat a little
faster ... but I probably could have lowered that too. btw - the timer
only cost about $14 at a hardware store.
Jerry
|
403.36 | leave the kids home when shopping | SMURF::FORTIER | | Fri Oct 19 1990 14:28 | 3 |
| I stopped taking my kids to the grocery store with me and that makes
a big difference in my food bill.
|
403.37 | Buttons | POWDML::OCG_TEMP | | Mon Oct 29 1990 11:03 | 6 |
| re: a few back.....
Where is that ladies blouse factory located? I'd love to be able to
buy some buttons.
Lori B.
|
403.38 | | TCC::HEFFEL | Vini, vidi, visa | Mon Oct 29 1990 11:21 | 8 |
| May not help much...
It's in Greenville, S.C. :-)
BTW, I went there the other day, and got two measuring cups full of
buttons for 50 cents! (That's about 400 buttons.)
Tracey
|
403.39 | A bit too far to travel, just to save a buck! | POWDML::OCG_TEMP | | Tue Oct 30 1990 09:27 | 3 |
| Nope, I live in Massachusetts. How'd you like to send me some! :-)
Lori B.
|