Thursday, February 18, 2010
Earth Friendly Cleaners That Multitask
by Donnalynn Polito
It’s hard to accept, I know, but earth friendly cleaners can multitask better than us mere mortals. In fact, we may well be impairing our brain by multitasking. Eventually, our multitasking efforts slow us down and getting us a big fat zero in performance tests.
Earth friendly cleaners, on the other hand, are great multitaskers. They clean, smell good, are non-toxic, biodegrade easily, and require no gloves or head gear whether they’re used as stand alone products or blended. With just a few basic ingredients, you can create your own earth friendly cleaners.
Just think what you can save if you try your hand at this. You don’t have to hop into your car, producing carbon dioxide, to run down to the store, taking precious minutes away from your day. Darn, you forgot your sunglasses!
At the store, you check out the labels which you really don’t know what you’re looking at, chose one that’s in a plastic bottle, a bottle which is hard to create and even harder to recycle and then, dash home.
Once home, you read the instructions and put on the gloves. It may be time for the gasmasks.Because we clean our floors with one kind of cleaner, our countertops with another and our upholstery and covers with yet another, we don’t even realize the toxic soup we have created.
Maybe this is just habit, or maybe you haven’t tried other options because you don’t know where to start.
It may seem that making your home green is an overwhelming, expensive redo. That doesn’t have to be.
Because we can start with some easy and very effective that works toward detoxing our homes, we can also work toward creating our much desired eco living green lifestyles. Limiting our exposure to toxic chemicals can start with our household cleaning products.
Don’t dismay. You have more choices than you think. You can choose green cleaners that work with enzymes, and you can also try cleaning solutions that are much closer at hand.
Have goo on your upholstery from all those meals on the sofa while watching the Olympics? What about crumbs and sticky on your bedding from wonderful breakfasts in bed? No worries.
10 Ways to Look Under the Covers is a free PDF that’s chock full of information and it’s just a click away. You don’t even have to get into your car!
Did I mention lemon juice, borax, cola that has gone flat, salt, club soda? Or what about almond oil, baby oil, beaten egg whites, crushed walnuts, cream of tartar, toothpaste, flour?
I know, you’re still a bit skeptical. It’s hard to imagine these items working as well as the traditional methods we all know and have grown up with.
Traditional dry cleaning products may work, but they also may contain perchloroethylene, naphthalene, ethanol, ammonia and detergents. Overexposure to these chemicals can lead to brain and central nervous system damage, behavior problems, asthma, cancer and more.
In 10 Ways to Look Under the Covers, you’ll learn that while some cleaners have switched to a so-called ‘green’ cleaning process. Here is what you need to watch out for: avoid hydrocarbon, greenearth and solvair CO2 cleaning methods. Although they are better than using perc, they still contain toxic solvents. Get your copy now!
Labels:
earth friendly cleaners,
green cleaners,
non toxic
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Save Water With Natural Fiber Fabrics For Home Furnishings
Saving water by choosing natural fiber fabrics may not be at the top of your list when fabric shopping for your home furnishings, but it can be. Natural fibers like hemp require virtually no water and produce beautiful fabrics.
Hemp is one of those natural fibers that can be made into beautiful home furnishings and beautiful clothing, as well. Hemp is strong and soft. With clothing, the more you wash hemp, the softer it becomes.
Of course, you couldn’t stick your sofa in the washer, but you can find easy tips to cleaning natural fiber fabrics by signing up for our DIY Newsletter.
Hemp is often blended with other fibers for a number of reasons. One of those reasons is that hemp helps keep items from stretching and losing shape.
It absorbs moisture and has moisture transfer properties that make it an ideal fabric for hot weather climates. Hemp is also UV, mold and rot resistant.
With all these wonderful qualities, hemp becomes an even better choice for our home furnishing fabric when we look at its growing requirements.
Hemp requires very little to grow. Hemp is a ‘bast’ fiber which means it comes from the bark of the plant. Bast fibers are very hardy. It requires little to no pesticides and no herbicides.
Cotton, on the other hand, requires tons of pesticides and chemicals to protect itself from pests throughout its production process. Cotton also uses an enormous amount of water to grow.
Check our my video “Eco Living Textiles” to learn more about cotton.
Hemp starts from seed and produces a dense crop with a canopy that keeps moisture in and weeds out. It provides fertile ground for a diverse population of animals, insects and other micro-organisms.
Hemp’s root system is deep preventing soil erosion. The skin of the hemp plant is insect resistant. Hemp is often used as a rotational crop.
Hemp has been grown for over 12,000 years. It’s used in textiles, wood fibers, for paper, biodegradable plastics, construction, fuel and health food products.
Hemp can produce 4 times per acre what an average forest can yield. Using hemp in place of some wood products can help save forests, wildlife habitats and increase carbon sequestration.
Because of the long fibers in hemp, its paper products can be recycled several times over and more than wood based paper. Hemp is the fastest growing biomass known.
As a health food, hemp oil is the richest known source of polyunsaturated essential fatty acids and essential amino acids.
Hemp often gets confused with marijuana and is not allowed to be grown in the United States. Other countries, however, are moving forward and have successfully introduced hemp farming, creating a multi-billion dollar industry.
Just to keep things clear, hemp comes from the same species as marijuana, but hemp contains virtually no THC, the stuff that makes poco loco in marijuana. Hemp cannot be used as a drug.
Need some questions answered about choosing the right fabric for your next home improvement project? Creating your eco living lifestyle is easier than you think.
Hemp is one of those natural fibers that can be made into beautiful home furnishings and beautiful clothing, as well. Hemp is strong and soft. With clothing, the more you wash hemp, the softer it becomes.
Of course, you couldn’t stick your sofa in the washer, but you can find easy tips to cleaning natural fiber fabrics by signing up for our DIY Newsletter.
Hemp is often blended with other fibers for a number of reasons. One of those reasons is that hemp helps keep items from stretching and losing shape.
It absorbs moisture and has moisture transfer properties that make it an ideal fabric for hot weather climates. Hemp is also UV, mold and rot resistant.
With all these wonderful qualities, hemp becomes an even better choice for our home furnishing fabric when we look at its growing requirements.
Hemp requires very little to grow. Hemp is a ‘bast’ fiber which means it comes from the bark of the plant. Bast fibers are very hardy. It requires little to no pesticides and no herbicides.
Cotton, on the other hand, requires tons of pesticides and chemicals to protect itself from pests throughout its production process. Cotton also uses an enormous amount of water to grow.
Check our my video “Eco Living Textiles” to learn more about cotton.
Hemp starts from seed and produces a dense crop with a canopy that keeps moisture in and weeds out. It provides fertile ground for a diverse population of animals, insects and other micro-organisms.
Hemp’s root system is deep preventing soil erosion. The skin of the hemp plant is insect resistant. Hemp is often used as a rotational crop.
Hemp has been grown for over 12,000 years. It’s used in textiles, wood fibers, for paper, biodegradable plastics, construction, fuel and health food products.
Hemp can produce 4 times per acre what an average forest can yield. Using hemp in place of some wood products can help save forests, wildlife habitats and increase carbon sequestration.
Because of the long fibers in hemp, its paper products can be recycled several times over and more than wood based paper. Hemp is the fastest growing biomass known.
As a health food, hemp oil is the richest known source of polyunsaturated essential fatty acids and essential amino acids.
Hemp often gets confused with marijuana and is not allowed to be grown in the United States. Other countries, however, are moving forward and have successfully introduced hemp farming, creating a multi-billion dollar industry.
Just to keep things clear, hemp comes from the same species as marijuana, but hemp contains virtually no THC, the stuff that makes poco loco in marijuana. Hemp cannot be used as a drug.
Need some questions answered about choosing the right fabric for your next home improvement project? Creating your eco living lifestyle is easier than you think.
Labels:
eco living,
fabrics,
green crises,
hemp,
home furnishings,
natural fiber fabrics,
save water
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Why That Cheap Fabric Ain't So Cheap
by Donnalynn Polito
Looking for a cheap fabric that will bring the final touches to your living room? What about a cheap fabric for that dress you’ve been dying to make? Maybe you’re just looking for a particular fabric that’s beautiful and that you know you can find for a cheaper price than what your designer is trying to sell it to you for.
We devour bargains of all sorts, and looking for a cheap fabric isn’t any different. In fact, we devour cheap fabrics because of their pricing and are often willing to sacrifice some quality to save some money. When it wears out, guess what, we can go out and get another one!
It’s no surprise that the demand for cheap fabric is huge. This demand, of course, fuels an abundant supply of cheap fabric. Sort of a whatever-Lola wants-Lola-gets routine (an old but memorable song).
The demand for cotton falls into one of the biggest demand and supply categories. Cotton has many desirable characteristics. Among many of its characteristics, it is versatile, stable, naturally comfortable and cheap.
We’re not dummies. We all recognize that cheap comes with a hidden cost, but do we really, really know just how steep that cost is? Really?
You can guess at some of it. For one, just like we devour bargains, boll weevils devour cotton crops. So, yes pesticides will be among the first costs we have to factor in.
Are you ready to factor in another 149 chemicals? A lack of information has a huge cost. This video will bring you and Lola up to date. Take a look.
Want to get some great tips on how you can have that beautiful look at a good price and that keeps you and your family in that marvelous eco living lifestyle you have become accustomed to?
Looking for a cheap fabric that will bring the final touches to your living room? What about a cheap fabric for that dress you’ve been dying to make? Maybe you’re just looking for a particular fabric that’s beautiful and that you know you can find for a cheaper price than what your designer is trying to sell it to you for.
We devour bargains of all sorts, and looking for a cheap fabric isn’t any different. In fact, we devour cheap fabrics because of their pricing and are often willing to sacrifice some quality to save some money. When it wears out, guess what, we can go out and get another one!
It’s no surprise that the demand for cheap fabric is huge. This demand, of course, fuels an abundant supply of cheap fabric. Sort of a whatever-Lola wants-Lola-gets routine (an old but memorable song).
The demand for cotton falls into one of the biggest demand and supply categories. Cotton has many desirable characteristics. Among many of its characteristics, it is versatile, stable, naturally comfortable and cheap.
We’re not dummies. We all recognize that cheap comes with a hidden cost, but do we really, really know just how steep that cost is? Really?
You can guess at some of it. For one, just like we devour bargains, boll weevils devour cotton crops. So, yes pesticides will be among the first costs we have to factor in.
Are you ready to factor in another 149 chemicals? A lack of information has a huge cost. This video will bring you and Lola up to date. Take a look.
Want to get some great tips on how you can have that beautiful look at a good price and that keeps you and your family in that marvelous eco living lifestyle you have become accustomed to?
Friday, January 15, 2010
Global Warming Effects On The Wallet
by Donnalynn Polito
photo by Olaf Otto Becker
One of the most expensive effects of global warming can be the rising of sea levels as we work to defend ourselves against the rising sea.
According to glaciologists, there is growing evidence that the melting of glaciers is speeding up. With 90% of glaciers retreating and thinning, the world’s ice is melting at an alarming rate. Some glaciers are gone completely.
As glaciers melt, river flow increases, but that’s only a temporary situation. When the glaciers are gone altogether, there will be no flow into the rivers. We will then have to rely totally on rain to sustain the rivers, an iffy possibility at best.
In Greenland, the ice is melting at a rate of 250 billion tons a year and Antarctica isn’t far behind. This melting ice along with warmer ocean waters from climate change is making sea levels rise.
A photographer who has spent many years in Greenland taking beautiful photos of the landscape took a photo of a glacier in 1999 for his book, Under the Nordic Light. When he returned 3 years later, the glacier was gone.
More recent photographs by Olaf Otto Becker show the changing landscapes of Greenland.
The pockmarked snow in Becker’s photos are dark from an airstream of dust as far away as China. As the dust and ice mix, they gradually become tracks, holes, then rivers, lakes and deep glacial holes that can go hundreds of feet down called moulins.
Becker's trips to Greenland and the startling photographic history he has compiled had recently been brought to the attention of the Copenhagen summit.
Olaf Otto Becker has three books published that describe his journeys into the far reaching lands of Greenland and show a dazzling but disturbing photographic history of glaciers melting.
The names of these books are “Under The Nordic Light”, “Broken Light”, and “Above Zero”, Becker’s most recent. A convenient Amazon link to your left is where you can easily preview and purchase any of these books.
Share your experience on our newly added Guest Book. We’d love to hear from you!
photo by Olaf Otto Becker
One of the most expensive effects of global warming can be the rising of sea levels as we work to defend ourselves against the rising sea.
According to glaciologists, there is growing evidence that the melting of glaciers is speeding up. With 90% of glaciers retreating and thinning, the world’s ice is melting at an alarming rate. Some glaciers are gone completely.
As glaciers melt, river flow increases, but that’s only a temporary situation. When the glaciers are gone altogether, there will be no flow into the rivers. We will then have to rely totally on rain to sustain the rivers, an iffy possibility at best.
In Greenland, the ice is melting at a rate of 250 billion tons a year and Antarctica isn’t far behind. This melting ice along with warmer ocean waters from climate change is making sea levels rise.
A photographer who has spent many years in Greenland taking beautiful photos of the landscape took a photo of a glacier in 1999 for his book, Under the Nordic Light. When he returned 3 years later, the glacier was gone.
More recent photographs by Olaf Otto Becker show the changing landscapes of Greenland.
The pockmarked snow in Becker’s photos are dark from an airstream of dust as far away as China. As the dust and ice mix, they gradually become tracks, holes, then rivers, lakes and deep glacial holes that can go hundreds of feet down called moulins.
Becker's trips to Greenland and the startling photographic history he has compiled had recently been brought to the attention of the Copenhagen summit.
Olaf Otto Becker has three books published that describe his journeys into the far reaching lands of Greenland and show a dazzling but disturbing photographic history of glaciers melting.
The names of these books are “Under The Nordic Light”, “Broken Light”, and “Above Zero”, Becker’s most recent. A convenient Amazon link to your left is where you can easily preview and purchase any of these books.
Share your experience on our newly added Guest Book. We’d love to hear from you!
Labels:
Copenhagen,
glaciers,
global warming,
melting ice,
Olaf Otto Becker
Monday, December 28, 2009
Water Pollution Of A River And The Clean Up 33 Years Later
by Donnalynn Polito
In checking out the news today, I saw that the Ottawa River in Ohio is finally being cleaned up of its pollution. What, I wondered, was in the Ottawa River that made its waters polluted and why now to clean it up. A further read into the article produced some toxic chemical names that we all have heard of before.
Polychlorinated biphenyls or PCPs, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, called PAHs; and heavy metals.
What struck me was that PCPs were outlawed in 1976. Isn’t the year 2009? You mean to tell me it has taken 33 years before this chemical is getting cleaned up from a river in Ohio?
In Toledo, Ohio, the Ottawa River will have 260,000 cubic yards of contaminated sediment removed in an effort to reduce the impacts on human health and the environment.
And where does all the 260,000 cubic yards of contamination go? To the landfill where, I suspect, it can seep for another 30-some years. Well, funny you should mention it.
The article goes on to state that about 5% of the contaminated sediment is too dangerous to put into landfill, so it will go to specialized licensed landfills.
While the city and its representatives are really happy about this step forward, it took the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s lawsuit against the City of Toledo and 13 businesses before any action was taken.
So what are these chemicals and how do they get into the water?
Let’s start with polychlorinated biphenyls or PCBs. PCBs were widely used in many industrial applications. They were used as coolants, as the oil in transformers, as plasticizers in paint and cement, in flame retardants, lubricating oils, sealants such as caulking in schools and commercial buildings, adhesives in floor finishes, on and on. It seems like PCBs were used everywhere.
PCBs are fairly inert chemically and are very stable compounds. They do not degrade very easily. Their toxicity, however, was recognized as early as 1937. It took until the 1970s for PCBs to be outlawed.
Because they were used in so many applications and because they do not degrade very easily, PCBs still remain in the environment and are a concern to everyone.
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons or PAHs are one of the most widespread organic pollutants. PAHs are found in fossil fuels and tar deposits. They are also produced as byproducts to burning fuel as hydrocarbon emissions.
Because of their molecular structure, different types of combustion produce different types of pollutants or mixtures of PAHs. PAHs are produced by the incomplete combustion of carbon contained in fuels like wood, coal, diesel, fat, tobacco or incense. So, coal burning would produce a different type of PAH from a motor fuel combustion.
Heavy metals are anybody’s guess and the term is often called meaningless or misleading since a large variation of heavy metals exist in the environment and some are actually required for human health. As trace elements, humans need heavy metals for our metabolic systems.
Our concern is with the heavy metals that don’t have any benefit to the environment. In fact, over time, the accumulation of these heavy metals become toxic and can cause considerable damage to living organisms.
The pollution from heavy metals can come from many sources. A common source is the smelting of copper, the preparation of nuclear fuels, electroplating, and the mining and refining of metals.
Heavy metals accumulate over time, lay dormant and do not decay. This makes clean up particularly difficult and worrisome.
Lakes Don’t Do Much Better and Are In Poor Health
In our natural and man-made lakes, we have similar issues. Mercury in game fish is still an issue as well as PCBs which are also found in lakes.
Nitrogen and phosphorous are found at high levels in many lakes. Excess amounts of these elements produce algae blooms, weed growth, reduce water clarity and make other lake problems.
As survey work continues to be done, we can evaluate the progress we are making in cleaning up our waters and restoring the quality of our lakes and waters.
Cleaning products are a source of significant amounts of phosphorous in our water. Alternative cleaners are safe and effective. Why use less phosphorus-containing compound cleaning systems when you don’t need it at all?
Find out why wowgreen cleaning products are like no other cleaning product. They are safe for you, your family, your pets and the water!
In checking out the news today, I saw that the Ottawa River in Ohio is finally being cleaned up of its pollution. What, I wondered, was in the Ottawa River that made its waters polluted and why now to clean it up. A further read into the article produced some toxic chemical names that we all have heard of before.
Polychlorinated biphenyls or PCPs, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, called PAHs; and heavy metals.
What struck me was that PCPs were outlawed in 1976. Isn’t the year 2009? You mean to tell me it has taken 33 years before this chemical is getting cleaned up from a river in Ohio?
In Toledo, Ohio, the Ottawa River will have 260,000 cubic yards of contaminated sediment removed in an effort to reduce the impacts on human health and the environment.
And where does all the 260,000 cubic yards of contamination go? To the landfill where, I suspect, it can seep for another 30-some years. Well, funny you should mention it.
The article goes on to state that about 5% of the contaminated sediment is too dangerous to put into landfill, so it will go to specialized licensed landfills.
While the city and its representatives are really happy about this step forward, it took the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s lawsuit against the City of Toledo and 13 businesses before any action was taken.
So what are these chemicals and how do they get into the water?
Let’s start with polychlorinated biphenyls or PCBs. PCBs were widely used in many industrial applications. They were used as coolants, as the oil in transformers, as plasticizers in paint and cement, in flame retardants, lubricating oils, sealants such as caulking in schools and commercial buildings, adhesives in floor finishes, on and on. It seems like PCBs were used everywhere.
PCBs are fairly inert chemically and are very stable compounds. They do not degrade very easily. Their toxicity, however, was recognized as early as 1937. It took until the 1970s for PCBs to be outlawed.
Because they were used in so many applications and because they do not degrade very easily, PCBs still remain in the environment and are a concern to everyone.
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons or PAHs are one of the most widespread organic pollutants. PAHs are found in fossil fuels and tar deposits. They are also produced as byproducts to burning fuel as hydrocarbon emissions.
Because of their molecular structure, different types of combustion produce different types of pollutants or mixtures of PAHs. PAHs are produced by the incomplete combustion of carbon contained in fuels like wood, coal, diesel, fat, tobacco or incense. So, coal burning would produce a different type of PAH from a motor fuel combustion.
Heavy metals are anybody’s guess and the term is often called meaningless or misleading since a large variation of heavy metals exist in the environment and some are actually required for human health. As trace elements, humans need heavy metals for our metabolic systems.
Our concern is with the heavy metals that don’t have any benefit to the environment. In fact, over time, the accumulation of these heavy metals become toxic and can cause considerable damage to living organisms.
The pollution from heavy metals can come from many sources. A common source is the smelting of copper, the preparation of nuclear fuels, electroplating, and the mining and refining of metals.
Heavy metals accumulate over time, lay dormant and do not decay. This makes clean up particularly difficult and worrisome.
Lakes Don’t Do Much Better and Are In Poor Health
In our natural and man-made lakes, we have similar issues. Mercury in game fish is still an issue as well as PCBs which are also found in lakes.
Nitrogen and phosphorous are found at high levels in many lakes. Excess amounts of these elements produce algae blooms, weed growth, reduce water clarity and make other lake problems.
As survey work continues to be done, we can evaluate the progress we are making in cleaning up our waters and restoring the quality of our lakes and waters.
Cleaning products are a source of significant amounts of phosphorous in our water. Alternative cleaners are safe and effective. Why use less phosphorus-containing compound cleaning systems when you don’t need it at all?
Find out why wowgreen cleaning products are like no other cleaning product. They are safe for you, your family, your pets and the water!
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Safe Drinking Water Facts Reveal Contamination
by Donnalynn Polito
“A glass of safe drinking water, please” in response to the waiter, hardly! Do you mutter to yourself on a hot, dry day, ‘ah, at last, a glass of safe drinking water to quench my thirst’. I doubt it.
Or, as a visiting guest at someone’s home, when they offer you a glass of water, do you think, ‘hmmm, is this drinking water safe for me to drink?’
Knowing that our water systems are regulated, we gulp down what comes before us with hardly a thought about its performance in and to our bodies. We believe our drinking water to be safe drinking water.
On closer look, recent research has revealed our safe drinking water is contaminated. In fact, after millions of tests by water utilities, 315 pollutants have been identified to be in our tap water.
Recent studies have shown that an estimated 64 million Americans are exposed to and drink contaminated tap water. To find out more about what’s in your drinking water, sign up for our DYI Greenstyle Tips.
“Only 91 contaminants are regulated by the Safe Drinking Water Act, yet more than 60,000 chemicals are used within the United States, according to Environmental Protection Agency estimates.” That Tap Water is Legal but May Be Unhealthy by Charles Duhigg, New York Times, published December 16, 2009.
EcolivingGreenstyle has been following Charles Duhigg’s series on Toxic Waters. You can watch his video on Tainted Tap Water here.
Federal regulations are outdated and do not keep up with the thousands of chemicals added each year to our world and ultimately to our water supply.
Perhaps some hesitation now comes over you before you gulp down that glass of water whether it comes from the tap or from bottled water.
Purifying your water at home is a start. Seeing that some of these pollutants don’t reach the water is another step that you can take. Non toxic household cleaning products is an easy place to start.
“A glass of safe drinking water, please” in response to the waiter, hardly! Do you mutter to yourself on a hot, dry day, ‘ah, at last, a glass of safe drinking water to quench my thirst’. I doubt it.
Or, as a visiting guest at someone’s home, when they offer you a glass of water, do you think, ‘hmmm, is this drinking water safe for me to drink?’
Knowing that our water systems are regulated, we gulp down what comes before us with hardly a thought about its performance in and to our bodies. We believe our drinking water to be safe drinking water.
On closer look, recent research has revealed our safe drinking water is contaminated. In fact, after millions of tests by water utilities, 315 pollutants have been identified to be in our tap water.
Recent studies have shown that an estimated 64 million Americans are exposed to and drink contaminated tap water. To find out more about what’s in your drinking water, sign up for our DYI Greenstyle Tips.
“Only 91 contaminants are regulated by the Safe Drinking Water Act, yet more than 60,000 chemicals are used within the United States, according to Environmental Protection Agency estimates.” That Tap Water is Legal but May Be Unhealthy by Charles Duhigg, New York Times, published December 16, 2009.
EcolivingGreenstyle has been following Charles Duhigg’s series on Toxic Waters. You can watch his video on Tainted Tap Water here.
Federal regulations are outdated and do not keep up with the thousands of chemicals added each year to our world and ultimately to our water supply.
Perhaps some hesitation now comes over you before you gulp down that glass of water whether it comes from the tap or from bottled water.
Purifying your water at home is a start. Seeing that some of these pollutants don’t reach the water is another step that you can take. Non toxic household cleaning products is an easy place to start.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Enzyme Green Cleaning Products
by Donnalynn Polito
Enzymes have changed cleaning products both in how they work in our homes and how they work in the environment. Enzymes have made our cleaning products green.
Using enzymes in our cleaning products bring a lot of benefit because they eliminate the need for chemicals to do the job. Enzymes are non-toxic to us and the world around us and have the potential of reducing tons of carbon dioxide that’s pouring into our atmosphere.
So what are these enzymes that do so much of the heavy lifting to green our world?
Often I hear people ask if enzymes and green cleaning products do the cleaning job that we’re accustomed to and looking for. The answer is a resounding Yes!
In this article, I am going to give a simplified explanation of enzymes, what they are, how they work and their role in greening our household cleaning products.
Why Think Enzymes For Green Cleaning?
Enzymes were brought on board for household cleaning products because they break down the large stuff, like soil and stains, which are insoluble and turn them into smaller water soluble pieces of soil and stains. This breakdown allows the actual mechanics of the cleaning action to then wisk away the dirt.
Also, enzymes don’t stop working. In other words, they continue to work, stain after stain. Because they continue working, a small amount of enzymes can do the job of a much large amount of chemicals.
Enzymes don’t require a high temperature to begin their action, like lots detergents do. Recently, chemical detergents have been reformulated to work in cold water, but they still contain other toxins that we need to watch out for.
There are about four enzymes used in household cleaning products and each enzymes works on a specific task. Some household cleaning products only contain one or two enzymes. Others have figured out a way to combine more enzymes that produces a product completely non-toxic. A product you could eat, not that you’d want to.
And, of course, enzymes are fully biodegradable, which we all love and are grateful for.
Enzymes Speed It Up And Break It Down
Enzymes are proteins that speed up biological reactions and break down molecules to smaller, molecules that are easier to handle within a system. Just like our digestive systems, enzymes are responsible for breaking down the foods we eat which then get wisked away into our bloodstream.
Enzymes are found in all living organisms and are responsible for many of the biological reactions that happen within these organisms. Enzymes are made up of amino acids which are necessary for all metabolic processes or chemical reactions.
Because enzymes speed up chemical reactions, they are called biological catalysts. In order to manufacture products that contain the enzymes, a fermentation process is used. This fermentation process multiplies and harvests these biological catalysts which can then be used in a variety of industrial products, including our household cleaning products.
With cleaning products, enzymes break down the larger components or molecules into smaller ones which then get wisked away by the mechanical washing action.
The really cool thing about enzymes is that they speed up the metabolic process but do not get used up in the process. So, they go from stain to stain doing their work.
Enzymes used in household cleaning products include the following. Proteases work on soils and stains that contain proteins. An example would be grass and blood. The proteases enzymes work to breakdown long-chain proteins into smaller-chain proteins which are then washed away.
Stains from sauces, ice cream and gravies are broken down by the Amylases enzyme that removes starch-based soils. Again these enzymes breakdown larger molecules into smaller ones to be wisked away in the cleaning process.
The Lipases enzyme removes oil and grease, while the Cellulases enzyme provides general cleaning benefits like whitening and softening the fabric.
Putting Enzymes To Work For Us
Because the work of enzymes can be done in lower water temperatures than traditional chemicals, less water and energy is used in the cleaning process. Using less energy always cascades to less environmental pollution.
Enzymes are very cost effective. Enzymes can be used over and over, so more work can be done using less product.
Enzymes have a high efficiency rate because they replace the larger amounts of chemicals required in traditional cleaning products for the same amount of clean.
Enzymes are beneficial to the surfaces they are cleaning. They aren’t as abrasive so they don’t destroy the fabric.
Enzymes are fully biodegradable and save large amounts of raw materials. Enzymes also save energy and water because shorter washing cycles are required.
Enzymes work faster because they cause natural reactions to occur faster.
We can see why enzymes increase the performance of our household clean products and why it’s not only beneficial to the planet and frees our world of toxins, enzyme based products make our workload easier and saves us time, something we all are in need of.
Enzymes have changed cleaning products both in how they work in our homes and how they work in the environment. Enzymes have made our cleaning products green.
Using enzymes in our cleaning products bring a lot of benefit because they eliminate the need for chemicals to do the job. Enzymes are non-toxic to us and the world around us and have the potential of reducing tons of carbon dioxide that’s pouring into our atmosphere.
So what are these enzymes that do so much of the heavy lifting to green our world?
Often I hear people ask if enzymes and green cleaning products do the cleaning job that we’re accustomed to and looking for. The answer is a resounding Yes!
In this article, I am going to give a simplified explanation of enzymes, what they are, how they work and their role in greening our household cleaning products.
Why Think Enzymes For Green Cleaning?
Enzymes were brought on board for household cleaning products because they break down the large stuff, like soil and stains, which are insoluble and turn them into smaller water soluble pieces of soil and stains. This breakdown allows the actual mechanics of the cleaning action to then wisk away the dirt.
Also, enzymes don’t stop working. In other words, they continue to work, stain after stain. Because they continue working, a small amount of enzymes can do the job of a much large amount of chemicals.
Enzymes don’t require a high temperature to begin their action, like lots detergents do. Recently, chemical detergents have been reformulated to work in cold water, but they still contain other toxins that we need to watch out for.
There are about four enzymes used in household cleaning products and each enzymes works on a specific task. Some household cleaning products only contain one or two enzymes. Others have figured out a way to combine more enzymes that produces a product completely non-toxic. A product you could eat, not that you’d want to.
And, of course, enzymes are fully biodegradable, which we all love and are grateful for.
Enzymes Speed It Up And Break It Down
Enzymes are proteins that speed up biological reactions and break down molecules to smaller, molecules that are easier to handle within a system. Just like our digestive systems, enzymes are responsible for breaking down the foods we eat which then get wisked away into our bloodstream.
Enzymes are found in all living organisms and are responsible for many of the biological reactions that happen within these organisms. Enzymes are made up of amino acids which are necessary for all metabolic processes or chemical reactions.
Because enzymes speed up chemical reactions, they are called biological catalysts. In order to manufacture products that contain the enzymes, a fermentation process is used. This fermentation process multiplies and harvests these biological catalysts which can then be used in a variety of industrial products, including our household cleaning products.
With cleaning products, enzymes break down the larger components or molecules into smaller ones which then get wisked away by the mechanical washing action.
The really cool thing about enzymes is that they speed up the metabolic process but do not get used up in the process. So, they go from stain to stain doing their work.
Enzymes used in household cleaning products include the following. Proteases work on soils and stains that contain proteins. An example would be grass and blood. The proteases enzymes work to breakdown long-chain proteins into smaller-chain proteins which are then washed away.
Stains from sauces, ice cream and gravies are broken down by the Amylases enzyme that removes starch-based soils. Again these enzymes breakdown larger molecules into smaller ones to be wisked away in the cleaning process.
The Lipases enzyme removes oil and grease, while the Cellulases enzyme provides general cleaning benefits like whitening and softening the fabric.
Putting Enzymes To Work For Us
Because the work of enzymes can be done in lower water temperatures than traditional chemicals, less water and energy is used in the cleaning process. Using less energy always cascades to less environmental pollution.
Enzymes are very cost effective. Enzymes can be used over and over, so more work can be done using less product.
Enzymes have a high efficiency rate because they replace the larger amounts of chemicals required in traditional cleaning products for the same amount of clean.
Enzymes are beneficial to the surfaces they are cleaning. They aren’t as abrasive so they don’t destroy the fabric.
Enzymes are fully biodegradable and save large amounts of raw materials. Enzymes also save energy and water because shorter washing cycles are required.
Enzymes work faster because they cause natural reactions to occur faster.
We can see why enzymes increase the performance of our household clean products and why it’s not only beneficial to the planet and frees our world of toxins, enzyme based products make our workload easier and saves us time, something we all are in need of.
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