Here are the questions asked by community members. Read on to see the answers provided by the ThriftyFun community.
Is it safe to use cookware after being in a fire?
By Julia
My husband decided to boil the Easter eggs and fell asleep. Needless to say the eggs completely burned and burst all over my kitchen walls, oven, doors, ceiling, and created an enormous amount of smoke throughout my house and in every piece of furniture I own.
I was able to place the throw pillows into the dryer, add two dryer sheets and a few squirts of Febreze and let tumble dry. They turned out perfectly; the smell was completely gone. The problem is the furniture, Febreze helps a little. I can't take the covers off and put through the dryer. Any suggestions as to how I can get the smell out? Thanks.
By Katrina K.
After a fire, ridding your home of the smoke odor can be a daunting task. Books can easily harbor the lingering smoke smell for a long time.
Water and smoke damage can lessen the value of collectibles. This is a page features advice about cleaning collectibles damaged in a house fire.
ThriftyFun is one of the longest running frugal living communities on the Internet. These are archives of older discussions.
I just had a close call at my home from a fire, just a lot of smoke damage. I live in a trailer and I have scrubbed and scrubbed and can't get the smell out.
We had a house fire a few weeks ago and now we are trying to get the smell out of all our stuff, like our furniture, books etc.. Any ideas?