Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. I also forgot to mention that my walls smell amazing! I feel like I just hit the lottery. This will be my new go to. I left a few weeks ago and came back home to a house that didn’t smell fresh. It wasn’t the first time.
I will be leaving in a few days and can’t wait to see if I come back to that same stinky smell or if perhaps taking the time to clean the walls have helped!
I don’t know but I fully believed my house smelled bad all the time and I could only smell it when I’d been away, but then we went away and had a house sitter and when we came back the house smelled normal/clean. So I think when a house is shut up and empty it can just smell stale. The house sitter didn’t do any out of the ordinary cleaning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This would destroy our paint. We have a flat paint on all of our walls - can't do it.
Yeah you can, I have flat paint and it is fine. Just use hot water and a teeny bit of cleaner. If it messes up your paint, something is wrong with the paint.
Anonymous wrote:This would destroy our paint. We have a flat paint on all of our walls - can't do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long did it take you? I have so many dirty walls…
I am still working, lol. I will need a ladder for my rooms with high ceilings. So far it’s been about an hour. I saw someone mention a mop. Lol, that would’ve been helpful.
You don’t need a ladder. This is a bad reason to get on a ladder. You need a mop and maybe an extendable pole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long did it take you? I have so many dirty walls…
I am still working, lol. I will need a ladder for my rooms with high ceilings. So far it’s been about an hour. I saw someone mention a mop. Lol, that would’ve been helpful.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I also forgot to mention that my walls smell amazing! I feel like I just hit the lottery. This will be my new go to. I left a few weeks ago and came back home to a house that didn’t smell fresh. It wasn’t the first time.
I will be leaving in a few days and can’t wait to see if I come back to that same stinky smell or if perhaps taking the time to clean the walls have helped!
Here’s how to get clean, shiny floors:
We use one teaspoon of Powdered Tide in the bucket with hot, hot water; pump the foot pedal on the bucket seven to 10 times to wring out the mop until it’s almost dry. Scrub the floors twice, minimum. Keep an eye on your water and change it often. You cannot mop with dirty water. You will be floored (see what I did there?) with the results, no streaks, your water will be alarmingly filthy and you will feel like you can eat off your floor for the first time in years, I promise.
You’re an evangelist for powdered Tide laundry detergent — and not just for laundry. Why?
Clean your floors and walls with it once and you are sold for life. My grandma and my mom always used it when I was growing up, so I was taught to clean with it. I thought everyone knew the secret to the Tide magic, but boy, was I wrong. Powdered Tide Laundry has surfactants in it, which break up grease and stains (no matter what surface) that otherwise would not dissolve in water. Powdered Tide also has enzymes to break down dirt and stains into smaller pieces which make them easier to remove. Enzymes also break down smells.
When I first opened Go Clean Co, I was trying every cleaning product on the market and kept coming back to good old powdered Tide. Everything was taking longer to clean with other products, especially floors. My staff was mind boggled when I would show them how well it worked, so I started showing the Instagram world too… and the rest is history!
Anonymous wrote:^^ That's for the person who wanted the details of the IG link.
Anonymous wrote:How do you do this without messing up the paint? Every time I try to wipe a smudge off of mine, I end up with a bigger smudge that doesn't match.