Se il brillante programma televisivo di fine anni '80 "MacGyver" ci ha insegnato qualcosa, è che puoi respingere una banda di teppisti, evadere di prigione e costruire un'astronave funzionante con poco più di una graffetta, una batteria C, qualche colpo di scena cravatte e un tubetto di dentifricio vuoto .
Sì, ok, bene, MacGyver era finzione, ma puoi evocare ogni sorta di soluzioni utili per la casa - niente bazooka improvvisati, purtroppo - con oggetti di uso quotidiano che la maggior parte di noi butta sconsideratamente nella spazzatura. Unisciti a noi in un viaggio attraverso l'entusiasmante mondo delle ossessioni di riciclaggio/riutilizzo alimentate da Internet per identificare le 10 cose che non dovresti assolutamente buttare via.
- Clip per raccoglitori
- Foglio di alluminio
- Elettronica
- Tappi per vino
- Spremere le bottiglie
- Sacchetti di plastica per la spesa
- Occhiali
- Vecchie magliette
- Elastici
- Tubi di carta igienica
10: fermagli per raccoglitori
If you're cleaning out your home office and come across a box of these butterfly-winged beauties, do not even THINK of throwing them away. In the life hacker community, binder clips are the go-to tool for a clever solution to any household problem.
Binder clips are prized for their strength — if you ever had a fingertip, earlobe or tongue caught in one of these suckers, you know what we mean. They're also flat on one side, enabling them to stand up with some degree of stability.
Among the many, many, many uses that have been dreamed up for binder clips , here are some of our favorites [source: Gordon]:
- Minimalist wallet – pinch some folded cash and a credit card in the clip; even hang a house key from the silver handle.
- Picture "frames" – drive some nails into the wall, put binder clips on some favorite photos, then hang them from the nails.
- Toothpaste helper – keep your half-empty tube of toothpaste locked and loaded by rolling up and clipping the bottom.
- Cable corral – attach some clips to the edge of your desk to hold the ends of unused USB, power and audio cables.
9: Aluminum Foil
When Reynolds sold its first rolls of aluminum foil back in 1947, the company advertised it as the foil for "1,001 kitchen miracles." Foil exhibits some unique properties of metal — moisture-proof, odor-proof, able to withstand extreme temperatures — and adds the uncanny ability to be molded into any imaginable shape. Foil is also washable, making it the material with 1,001 lives.
Next time you use a sheet of foil to cover a plate of leftovers, rinse it off afterwards, and save it for one of these unexpected household uses [source: Stimpson]:
- Pot scrubber: Ball up some aluminum foil for an easy way to remove baked- on, caked-on grime from pots and pans. Also works on grease-caked grills.
- Silver polisher: Submerge tarnished silver in a glass pan of boiling water lined with aluminum foil; then add two teaspoons of salt. In minutes, a simple chemical reaction will dissolve the tarnish without damaging the silver.
- No-fuss funnel: Where's a funnel when you need it? Form a cone out of a double layer of foil and you're in business.
- Scissor sharpener: If your scissors get dull, simply cut through a sheet of aluminum foil.
8: Electronics
In the world of high-tech gadgets, it's a short trip from "next best thing!" to a child's plaything. Computers, TVs and cell phones fall out of fashion so fast that some folks have collections of old gadgets collecting dust in the basement. If you're tempted to drag yesterday's technology to the curb, check out these numbers about the benefits of recycling electronics [source Environmental Protection Agency]:
- Recycling 1 million laptops saves as much electricity as 3,500 American homes use in a year.
- Recycling 1 million cell phones saves 35,000 pounds (15,876 kilograms) of copper, 772 pounds (350 kilograms) of silver, 75 pounds (34 kilograms) of gold and 33 pounds (15 kilograms) of palladium.
Visit the EPA donation and recycling website to search for local retailers who accept old TVs, computers and cell phones. There are also charitable organizations like Cell Phones for Soldiers and Hope Phones that will take your old flip phone put it in the hands of someone who will really appreciate it. Another cool organization is Music and Memory, a group that gives old iPods and other MP3 players to dementia patients.
7: Wine Corks
Next time you pop open a nice full-bodied merlot or celebrate with a crisp bottle of Champagne, hold on to that cork. With some patience -- or some serious drinking – you'll collect enough corks to make dozens of cool DIY projects .
A simple bulletin board or corkboard is the classic project. Glue a hundred or so corks in an eye-catching pattern on a backing board or within a colorful frame. For a cork bath mat, slice the corks in half lengthwise and hot glue the flat sides to a sheet of shelf paper [source: Ewing].
Even if you only have a handful of corks, you can get creative. Make a floatable keychain by twisting a loop screw into a favorite cork. Carve a cool pattern into the end of a cork to make handy stamps [source: Puhala]. Or take thin slices of cork and glue them inside cabinet doors to make them slam-proof [source: Stimpson].
6: Squeeze Bottles
Step inside a fancy restaurant kitchen and alongside the expensive chef's knives and $200 All-Clad pans are cheap plastic squeeze bottles . Chefs fill squeeze bottles with olive oil, custom sauces and spicy condiments to add a controlled dash of flavor or color to a dish. You can buy the same squeeze bottles for your home kitchen or save a couple of bucks and raid the recycling bin.
The next time you make pancakes, fill a big squeezable ketchup bottle with the batter and squirt out perfect portions without drips or spills. Fill old salad dressing bottles with your own vinaigrette or wash out the Sriracha bottle (really well) and fill it with homemade Magic Shell ice cream topping [source: Trover].
Recycled squeeze bottles are equally useful outside of the kitchen. Fill old honey bear bottles with paint for the kids' art table or dispense hand soap from a former mustard bottle. It'll keep your guests guessing!
5: Plastic Grocery Bags
Far out in the Pacific Ocean floats an island of garbage twice the size of Texas. Known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch , it's an accidental accumulation of millions of tons of floating debris — much of it plastic — trapped in a convergence of oceanic currents.
The single-use plastic grocery bag has been targeted by environmental groups as a ubiquitous symbol of waste. Discarded plastic bags can travel hundreds of miles on the wind and float along rivers and oceans, if they don't lodge in trees first. Every year, an estimated 100,000 marine mammals and 1 million sea birds die from ingesting plastic waste [source: Surfrider]. Several states are currently considering "ban the bag" laws [source: NCSL].
Part of the trouble is that most municipal recycling programs don't accept plastic grocery bags. Most grocery stores will take back used bags, or you can give them a second or third life through a number of household uses.
- Make a comfy pillow for a pet by stuffing crumpled up plastic bags inside an old pillowcase.
- Protect a fragile package by stuffing the box with plastic bags.
- Use plastic bags as makeshift gloves when cleaning the bathroom.
- if you're really crafty, you can even make raincoats, yarn and reusable grocery totes out of loads of old bags.
4: Eyeglasses
There are millions of adults and children in developing countries without access to prescription eyeglasses and bifocal reading glasses. Uncorrected vision effectively renders them uneducated and unemployed, driving them even deeper into poverty. There are a number of charitable organizations that accept donations of used glasses, sort them by prescription, and ship them to people who cannot afford the luxury of good vision.
Lions Club International has been doing this good work for decades. Local branches of the Lions Club distribute eyeglass collection boxes to community buildings like libraries and schools. You can also mail eyeglasses to one of 18 Lions Eyeglass Recycling Centers worldwide.
New Eyes is another organization that distributes used eyewear to the needy. In addition to prescription eyeglasses and reading glasses in good condition, New Eyes accepts sunglasses, metal eyewear in any condition, and watches and jewelry that the organization sells to raise money.
3: Old T-Shirts
A favorite T-shirt is like an old friend. I have T-shirts that I've worn for 15 years and others that I should have stopped wearing a decade ago. When the holes on your favorite T-shirt are big enough to accidentally stick your arm through, it's time to consign your old friend to the rag drawer.
Cotton T-shirts make the best all-purpose rags for dusting, wiping off counters, washing cars. OK, that's not exactly true — old cloth diapers are the absolute champion of rags, but harder to find.
If you're a super-crafty DIY fashion type, check out these 50 ways to repurpose an old T-shirt including bracelets, hair wraps, tote bags, and rag rugs.
2: Rubber Bands
Rubber bands are a junk drawer staple (right next to the actual staples, coincidentally) and should never, under any circumstance, be thrown out. If you have small children, then you are familiar with the Parent's Rule of Rubber Bands and Tape, which states: "In the event that you should throw out a rubber band or finish a roll of Scotch tape, your children will immediately and desperately need said rubber band or tape for their school project."
Rubber bands are also a simple solution to loads of annoying household problems. Try these creative ideas [sources: Breyer and Reader's Digest]:
- Wrap a large rubber band around the top and bottom of an open paint can for a cleaner way to wipe off paint brushes.
- Avvolgi due elastici attorno ai bordi di un tagliere per evitare che scivoli.
- Avvolgi uno spesso elastico attorno ai coperchi dei barattoli difficili da aprire.
- Avvolgere tre volte un elastico attorno al centro di un cucchiaio di legno o di una spatola per evitare che scivoli nel boccale.
- Due ante dell'armadio a prova di bambino avvolgendo saldamente un elastico attorno alle maniglie adiacenti.
1: tubi di carta igienica
Quando i fratelli americani Clarence ed E. Irvin Scott inventarono il rotolo di carta igienica nel 1890, crearono più di un modo conveniente per dispensare un prodotto indispensabile; hanno acceso la nostra ossessione collettiva per l'umile tubo di carta igienica di cartone [fonte: McRobbie ]. Per i bambini, una manciata di tubi di carta igienica è foraggio per ore di divertimento sotto forma di binocoli, razzi, sottomarini, e questo senza l'aggiunta di tubi di carta assorbente.
Hanno anche usi per adulti. Invece di buttare via quei tubi di cartone, mettili al lavoro in casa con le seguenti idee brillanti [fonti: Reader's Digest , Real Simple ]:
- Metti un mucchio di sacchetti della spesa di plastica all'interno di un tubo di carta assorbente per creare un pratico dispenser.
- Organizza fasce per capelli e fermagli per capelli in bagno avvolgendoli attorno a un tubo di carta igienica.
- Evita che le prolunghe si aggroviglino piegandole ordinatamente all'interno di un tubo di carta assorbente.
- Evita che le luci natalizie si aggroviglino in magazzino avvolgendole attorno all'esterno di un rotolo di tovagliolo di carta e fissando l'estremità con del nastro adesivo.
- Archivia in modo sicuro documenti importanti come diplomi e certificati di nascita arrotolandoli all'interno di rotoli di carta assorbente.
Per molti altri suggerimenti per dare nuova vita a cose vecchie, controlla i collegamenti correlati nella pagina successiva.
Molte più informazioni
Nota dell'autore: 10 cose che non dovresti mai buttare via
sono uno sfigato. Non nel senso dello slang britannico, ma perché tendo a buttare via le cose piuttosto che escogitare modi creativi per riutilizzarle. Sono anche un americano della classe media, il che significa che mi porto dietro un notevole senso di colpa per l'enorme mucchio di spazzatura non biodegradabile che mando in discarica ogni anno. Cerco di riciclare il più possibile, ma ammetto che ci sono giorni - chiamiamolo giorni feriali - in cui preferirei buttare via qualcosa piuttosto che prendermi la briga di lavarlo e riporlo con la speranza che uno giorno può essere riproposto in un giocattolo per bambini fatto in casa o in un ironico sottobicchiere da cocktail. Questo è il motivo per cui non mi abbandono Pinterest .
articoli Correlati
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- 15 riutilizzi per buste
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- 5 Riutilizzi per contenitori di farina d'avena
- 8 Riutilizzi per Scatole di Cereali
- 5 riutilizzi per i calzini
Fonti
- Breyer, Melissa. "19 usi intelligenti per elastici." Abbracciatore di alberi. 23 ottobre 2012 (19 luglio 2014) http://www.treehugger.com/cleaning-organizing/19-clever-uses-for-rubber-bands.html
- Ewing, Monica. "Tappetino da bagno in sughero per vino." Nido artigianale. 24 marzo 2010 (19 luglio 2014) http://www.craftynest.com/2010/03/wine-cork-bath-mat/
- Gordon, Whitson. "10 miracoli fai-da-te che puoi realizzare con una clip raccoglitore da $ 1." Lifehacker. 21 luglio 2012 (19 luglio 2014) http://lifehacker.com/5927857/top-10-diy-miracles-you-can-accomplish-with-a-1-binder-clip
- McRobbie, Linda Rodriguez. "Storia della carta igienica: come l'America ha convinto il mondo a pulire". 7 novembre 2009 (19 luglio 2014) http://mentalfloss.com/article/23210/toilet-paper-history-how-america-convinced-world-wipe
- Conferenza nazionale delle legislature statali. "Legislazione statale sui sacchetti di plastica e carta: commissioni, tasse e divieti; riciclaggio e riutilizzo". Febbraio 2014 (19 luglio 2014) http://www.ncsl.org/research/environment-and-natural-resources/plastic-bag-legislation.aspx#bans
- Puhala, Kelly. "20 modi stravaganti per usare i tappi per vino." fijngenoegen + Co. 3 ottobre 2013 (19 luglio 2014) http://www.brit.co/wine-cork-roundup/
- Riepilogo del lettore. "12 usi straordinari per elastici" (19 luglio 2014) http://www.rd.com/home/12-extraordinary-uses-for-rubber-bands/
- Riepilogo del lettore. "18 Incredible Uses for Cardboard Tubes" (19 luglio 2014) http://www.rd.com/home/18-incredible-uses-for-cardboard-tubes/
- Veramente semplice. "50 nuovi usi preferiti di tutti i tempi per le cose vecchie" (19 luglio 2014) http://www.realsimple.com/home-organizing/new-uses-for-old-things/favorite-new-uses-00000000019718/ indice.html
- Cucine Reynolds. "Aluminum Foil" (19 luglio 2014) http://www.reynoldskitchens.com/products/aluminum-foil/
- Stimpson, Jennifer. "10 usi per il foglio di alluminio." Questa vecchia casa (19 luglio 2014) http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/photos/0,,20225533_20509123,00.html
- Stimpson, Jennifer. "10 usi per i tappi per vino." Questa vecchia casa (19 luglio 2014) http://www.thisoldhouse.com/toh/article/0,,20176738,00.html
- Fondazione Surfrider. "Rise Above Plastics" (19 luglio 2014) http://www.surfrider.org/programs/entry/rise-above-plastics#program-resources
- Trover, Sara Rae. "Utilizzi per la sempre meravigliosa bottiglia di plastica da spremere". Terapia dell'appartamento. 13 novembre 2008 (19 luglio 2014) http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/uses-for-wonderful-plastic-squ-69471
- Agenzia per la protezione ambientale degli Stati Uniti. "Donazione e riciclaggio di elettronica" (19 luglio 2014) http://www.epa.gov/epawaste/conserve/materials/ecycling/donate.htm