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23 Budget-Friendly Things To Transform Your Yard

23 Budget-Friendly Things To Transform Your Yard

Buzz Feeda day ago

A standing weeder (without the chemicals!) in case you've found your dream home, but, unfortunately, it came with a grass full of dandelions. Unwind after a busy day at the office with some therapeutic weeding that won't hurt your back. 👍
And a crack weeder tool to add to your yard clean-up arsenal — it has a head specifically designed to rake through the thinnest cracks and pull out all those unwanted weeds right from their roots.
A dog spot repair to help restore your lawn to a lush, green state even if Fido has focused on a specific spot right in the middle of your lawn to *~do his business*~.
And "no-dig" fencing to place along your garden beds to prevent small animals from digging up your prized petunias — it doesn't need any tools to be installed (woohoo!) and will effectively protect your flowers and vegetables so they can *actually* grow this year instead of being eaten by your friendly (but hungry) neighborhood squirrels.
A Hori Hori Japanese weeding knife with a dual-sided blade you can use for digging, weeding, cutting, and planting — not to mention you'll look pretty badass whipping this bad boy out to fight off some dandelions.
A grass gauge you can count on to remind you when your lawn needs a lil' trim — and not without a sense of humor. 😉 Can someone make one of these for my actual hair? TYSM.
A plant supporter that'll give your tomato plants and bushes a bit more support so they can grow big and tall — since they're powder-coated in green they wont' ruin your garden's *~aesthetic~*.
A row of colorful flower pots with draining holes and hooks that'll brighten up your deck with very minimal effort.
A pack of Miracle-Gro water-storing crystals that'll get your outdoor plants in tip-top shape by ensuring you don't under water (or over water!) 'em. Mix the crystals into your soil and let them work their magic (and by magic I mean they absorb water and keep the soil at a perfect moisture level).
Or (!!!) Miracle-Gro tree and shrub plant food spikes to give all of the color coordinated flowers you planted in beds along your back fence the *~oomph~* they need to really take off and flourish. Looking out your sliding patio door is about to be a lot more enjoyable.
Liquid Fence deer and rabbit repellent that'll make your beloved outdoor garden smell absolutely disgusting to the precious lil' creatures that frequent your yard. While we love you, Sir Hops A Lot, we'd prefer you snack on something other than our flower beds.
A variety of sunflower seeds to revive that boring patch of dirt in your yard into a photo shoot–worthy garden without the stress of hand selecting which flowers to plant. Alexa, play "Sunflower" by Harry Styles.
Or a pack of wildflower seeds packed with 30,000 seeds (jeeeez) to transform that boring patch of dirt in your yard into a photo shoot–worthy garden without the stress of hand selecting which flowers to plant.
A vibrant bee-watering station that'll double as a piece of art in your garden — it'll provide a buzz-worthy haven for your fave pollinators to hang in and recharge before they get back to work. They're called "busy bees" for a reason!
A programmable timer to work some Fairy Godmother-like magic on your hose and transform it into a sprinkler. Bibbidi, Bobbidi, Boo-tiful lawn!
Pruning shears, for anyone who has successfully created their own magical rose garden in their yard. Better get yourself a glass jar too to display it like in Beauty and the Beast.
A cordless grass trimmer that'll help you tackle hard-to-reach areas in your garden bed or simply get the job done if you are the proud owner of a tiny patch of grass.
And a long-handled lopper to help you trim any overgrown bushes or trees in your yard, a must-have for anyone who isn't Edward Scissorhands.
A garden dibber to make planting bulbs, sowing seeds, and breaking up clumps of dirt easier than ever — every gardener should have one of these babies!
A seeding square kit, so planting your lil' sprouts won't turn into a game of guess and check. You'll know *exactly* what pattern you planted your basil seeds in this year.
A soaker hose you can attach to the hose you already own to provide your bushes, plants, and trees with the shower they've always dreamt of.
A ready-to-spray bleach-free outdoor cleaner to help you tackle stubborn stains without having to break out a pressure washer (phew). It's made with a fast-foaming formula that's safe for plants (double phew). Fare thee well, backyard filth!
And solar powered light-up flowers to make your boring old garden beds feel like Alice's Wonderland once night falls. Your friends won't be able to resist taking aesthetic Insta pics of them — imagine how whimsical they'll look with a cool filter added to them???

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What Are Emoji?
What Are Emoji?

Atlantic

timea day ago

  • Atlantic

What Are Emoji?

In the arenas of ancient Rome, the thumbs-up was a matter of life and death. So scholars have extrapolated from the elusive history of ancient gestures. The fates of defeated gladiators were determined by an emperor or another official, who might heed the wishes of the crowd: Thumbs hidden within closed fists were votes for mercy; thumbs-ups were votes for death. Today, the 👍, now flipped into a gesture of approval, is a tool of vague efficiency. Deployed as an emoji—as a hand summoned from a keyboard, suspended between literalism and language—it says 'okay' and declines to say more. But lately the crowds of the internet have found new ways to channel the old dramas. On the matter of the 👍, the arbiters of our own arena—internet-savvy young adults—have rendered their verdict: The 👍 is no longer definitive. It is no longer, for that matter, necessarily positive. 'Gen Z Has Canceled the Thumbs-Up Emoji Because It's 'Hostile,' ' one headline put it, citing data gathered in surveys and in the wild. Particularly as a reply to messages that contain words, Zoomers say, the 👍 is dismissive, disrespectful, even 'super rude.' It's a digital mumble, a surly if you say so, a sure but screw you. It is passive aggression, conveyed with pictographic clarity yet wrapped in plausible deniability. News of this emoji revisionism spread for the same reason so many of Gen Z's pronouncements do: Young adults, speaking internet with native-language ease, have an air of authority. But the news also spread because it was a warning of sorts about online communication at large. The double-edged 👍 meant that you could mean 'yes' or 'sounds great' while saying 'no,' or even 🖕. In online conversations, you can think you've said one thing and be read as having said another. Some have argued that the internet is creating a new kind of Babel. Here, in a cheerfully cartoonish form, were intimations of just that. Different groups of internet users—in this case, generations—can speak the same language and a different one. From the May 2022 issue: Jonathan Haidt on why the past 10 years of American life have been uniquely stupid Emoji (derived from the Japanese for picture and written character) were meant to bring humanity to conversations conducted across digital distances—to introduce a warm splash of color and expressiveness into a realm of text. Emoji are common property: Anyone can use them. Any group can define them in its own quirky way. But the resulting ambiguity can fuel tensions as well. Emoji have given rise to new codes of bigotry (🐸👌🥛) that allow their users the same plausible deniability that the 👍 does. Emoji can be cute, and they can also permit hatred to hide in plain sight. Have emoji enhanced communication, or abetted chaos? If emoji belong to everyone and no one, who gets to say what the default meaning might be? Emoji are less a language than they are 'insurgents within language,' Keith Houston writes in Face With Tears of Joy: A Natural History of Emoji. As his lively exploration of the form usefully puts it, they are the 'lingua franca' of the web, and the route they have traveled is more complicated than you might think. Their antecedents are ancient (Egyptian hieroglyphs, Chinese characters, Mesoamerican pictograms), though the journey from their modern birthplace (Japan circa the turn of the millennium) to their current ubiquity has been quick. That doesn't mean it has been smooth. Houston is contagiously enthusiastic about 'vibrant, vital emoji.' 🤗 He is also alert to the mixed blessings of the icons' versatility, their 'many-splendored entanglement with the written word.' Emoji, he writes, are 'a colorful and symbiotic virus whose symptoms we have only haltingly understood.' 🦠 Ambiguity, for emoji, is both a feature and a bug. One symptom of their elasticity is that no one can agree, exactly, on how to categorize them. Ever since their emergence, they have stirred debate among linguists. On their status as a language—implicitly recognized in 2015, when The Oxford English Dictionary named 😂 as its 'Word of the Year'—the consensus is 🤔: They are language-like without being language. (Houston suggests that 'body language' is a helpful way to think about them.) They're symbol-like, yet unlike most symbols, they constantly change in meaning and number. Can they function as punctuation (❣️🤡😬🔥)? Maybe they're better viewed as tactfully ambiguous conversation-enders—useful, as the writer Katy Waldman put it in 2016, for 'magicking us out of interpersonal jams.' Exiting his own definitional jam, Houston turns to the rich story of how emoji came to be. The ones most familiar today are typically attributed to the Japanese engineer Shigetaka Kurita; in 1999, a series of images that he designed were shared among users of Japan's main mobile carrier (teenage girls were the envisioned customers). Even the origin story of emoji, though, is muddied by questions about who really made them what they are. There are other contenders for 'first emoji' honors, Houston points out—so many, he writes, that 'it is no longer possible to imagine that emoji were ever 'invented' in the strictest sense of the word.' Instead, they evolved as so many technologies do: through a combination of accident and intention. In emoji, Japan's singular aesthetic traditions—manga and anime, in particular—achieved a form of universality. Emoji made use of manpu, the genre tropes commonly understood to convey amusement, anxiety, and other emotions. Exploding in popularity as digital chatting caught on—an ascent that accelerated when Apple, Google, and their fellow behemoths became emoji adopters—the pictograms acknowledged no national boundaries. In 2011, a year after emoji officially came under the supervision of a nonprofit called the Unicode Consortium, Apple introduced an emoji keyboard to its U.S.-marketed iPhones, bringing hearts and party poppers and sun-yellow faces to text messages throughout the land. The website Emojipedia, aiming to provide an exhaustive catalog of emoji, arrived in 2013. In 2014, a campaign got under way on the digital-petition site 'The Taco Emoji Needs to Happen,' it announced. The petition received more than 30,000 signatures, and the 🌮 was born. Taco Bell had been the catalyst. Two years later, an article titled 'A Beginner's Guide to Sexting' outed another 🌮 meaning, one its corporate sponsor likely never anticipated (vagina). Emoji, the not-quite-a-language language, were becoming part of the world's linguistic—and commercial—infrastructure, importing some of the unruliness of IRL interaction into virtual spaces. People used emoji to accentuate (👏🎉😂). They used emoji to hedge (😑🤔🌤️). They used emoji to joke (😜). They used emoji to flirt (😍😉). Emoji were pictures that could extend people's voices, visual icons that could help convey intended tone. They said nothing precisely, and that allowed them to express a lot: enthusiasm, sarcasm, anger, humor. They followed the same broad arc that the internet did; having originated as quirky novelties, they were becoming utilities. By the mid-2010s, the 'staid old Unicode,' as Houston comes to call the Consortium, had discovered the headaches accompanying 'emoji fever.' The organization, launched in 1991, was composed of a rotating group of engineers, linguists, and typographers charged with establishing coding consistency across the internet's static characters (letters, numbers, and the like); its goal was to enable global communication among disparate computers. Now it found itself overseeing dynamic characters as the public clamor for more emoji mounted. The Consortium was the gateway to new emoji: It invited the public to suggest additional icons. But its technologists were gatekeepers, too. They reviewed the applications, assessing the level of demand. They were the ones who decided which images to add—and which to deny. (Durex's campaign for a condom emoji fell short.) The annual unveiling of their decisions became, in some quarters (🤓), a much-anticipated event. Each new 'emoji season' brought fresh collections of icons to users' devices. But each also stirred reminders of the icons that weren't there. Faced with feedback from users frustrated by icon selection that could seem capricious and unfair, the arbiters did their best, Houston suggests, to gauge popular support for new candidates. But lapses in the lexicon were obvious, as a mere sampling reveals. Early on, 'professions' were depicted as masculine by default. 'Couple' was a man and a woman. The woman's shoe was a ruby-red heel. Representations of food reflected the pictograms' Japanese origins and U.S. tech dominance, but not their worldwide story. In the quest for more choices—and in response to users' campaigns—the Consortium added, among many other emoji, an array of food items. (They were not always culturally authentic: In an attempted nod to China's culinary traditions, a takeout box joined the lexicon.) In 2015, the group introduced five 'realistic' skin-tone options for humanlike emoji figures. The update brought unintended consequences. Lined up next to other hues, the sunny yellow originally meant to scan as race-neutral (in the lineage of the classic smiley face, Lego mini-figures, and the Simpsons) now read, to some, as racist. Light skin tones, intended to reflect users' skin color, evoked, Houston notes, a similar reaction: Some saw the choice of those light-hued symbols as a 'white power' gesture. Complexity, when emoji are involved, will always find its way back. The Consortium's Emoji Subcommittee—a 'crack team of emoji wranglers,' in Houston's words—had its hands full. Gender updating in particular proved challenging. Early Unicode guidance on depicting emoji people had emphasized, but not required, striving for gender neutrality. To move beyond stereotypes, should equity or androgyny lead the way? Same-sex couples and same-sex parents were soon included. Women were liberated, as one peeved op-ed writer had urged, from 'a smattering of tired, beauty-centric' emoji career options: 16 professions, available in male and female versions, were added. To Houston's surprise, the 2017 gender-focused emoji season met with no political or press furor—perhaps owing to public 'emoji fatigue,' he speculates. (Androgyny lived on that year, for the most part, as fantasy—through the magical figures issued in the new batch 🧙🧚🧛🧜🧞.) How much control, at this point, the subcommittee can exert over emoji denotation and connotation isn't clear. Unicode's emoji now coexist with platform-specific icons that users can customize for themselves (think: stickers, Bitmoji, Memoji). The latest iterations, such as Apple's Genmoji, use artificial intelligence to create ever more adaptable pictograms. Meanwhile, Unicode's emoji are becoming only more protean: The 💀 has expanded from a mark of disapproval to a sign of amusement (death via laughter). The 😭 might suggest laughter too now, in addition to its sobs. When words have oppositional meanings like this, context typically helps clarify which one applies—thanks to accompanying text, you can probably tell whether the 🍑 you just received is a fruit, a body part, or a call for impeachment. The 👍 and other emoji similarly used as stand-alone replies are part of a different class: They bring ambiguity without resolution. They bring a whiff of Babel. But myths have their own ambiguities. Although the Babel story conjures the arrival of a dystopia—a people perpetually lost in translation—it's also a creation myth: an ancient attempt to explain why people with so much in common are divided by their languages. Understandably, we tend to focus on the ending of the Babel tale, but it begins with humans in community. Only later does language divide them. For most of human history, communication barriers have made us illegible to one another. Emoji float, merrily (mostly), over the barriers. And their ambiguity is essential to their buoyancy. Emoji, as images, can never be tethered to one meaning. Even if 'emoji season' ceases to yield new crops, the icons that exist will keep evolving. They will keep challenging us to evolve with them. The namesake of Houston's book, the 'face with tears of joy,' has long been the world's most popular emoji. It has also been, according to recent reports, the subject of another Gen Z pronouncement: The 😂 is cringe. What it communicates, above all, is the hopeless unhipness of its sender. I use it anyway, mostly out of habit but also because, to me, joyful beats cool every time. And my 😂 are in good company. Each day, around the planet, billions of 😂 ping across screens. Their usage might decline in the future. Their primary meaning might change. For now, though, they are what we have. For now, because of them, we can laugh together across the distance.

23 Budget-Friendly Things To Transform Your Yard
23 Budget-Friendly Things To Transform Your Yard

Buzz Feed

timea day ago

  • Buzz Feed

23 Budget-Friendly Things To Transform Your Yard

A standing weeder (without the chemicals!) in case you've found your dream home, but, unfortunately, it came with a grass full of dandelions. Unwind after a busy day at the office with some therapeutic weeding that won't hurt your back. 👍 And a crack weeder tool to add to your yard clean-up arsenal — it has a head specifically designed to rake through the thinnest cracks and pull out all those unwanted weeds right from their roots. A dog spot repair to help restore your lawn to a lush, green state even if Fido has focused on a specific spot right in the middle of your lawn to *~do his business*~. And "no-dig" fencing to place along your garden beds to prevent small animals from digging up your prized petunias — it doesn't need any tools to be installed (woohoo!) and will effectively protect your flowers and vegetables so they can *actually* grow this year instead of being eaten by your friendly (but hungry) neighborhood squirrels. A Hori Hori Japanese weeding knife with a dual-sided blade you can use for digging, weeding, cutting, and planting — not to mention you'll look pretty badass whipping this bad boy out to fight off some dandelions. A grass gauge you can count on to remind you when your lawn needs a lil' trim — and not without a sense of humor. 😉 Can someone make one of these for my actual hair? TYSM. A plant supporter that'll give your tomato plants and bushes a bit more support so they can grow big and tall — since they're powder-coated in green they wont' ruin your garden's *~aesthetic~*. A row of colorful flower pots with draining holes and hooks that'll brighten up your deck with very minimal effort. A pack of Miracle-Gro water-storing crystals that'll get your outdoor plants in tip-top shape by ensuring you don't under water (or over water!) 'em. Mix the crystals into your soil and let them work their magic (and by magic I mean they absorb water and keep the soil at a perfect moisture level). Or (!!!) Miracle-Gro tree and shrub plant food spikes to give all of the color coordinated flowers you planted in beds along your back fence the *~oomph~* they need to really take off and flourish. Looking out your sliding patio door is about to be a lot more enjoyable. Liquid Fence deer and rabbit repellent that'll make your beloved outdoor garden smell absolutely disgusting to the precious lil' creatures that frequent your yard. While we love you, Sir Hops A Lot, we'd prefer you snack on something other than our flower beds. A variety of sunflower seeds to revive that boring patch of dirt in your yard into a photo shoot–worthy garden without the stress of hand selecting which flowers to plant. Alexa, play "Sunflower" by Harry Styles. Or a pack of wildflower seeds packed with 30,000 seeds (jeeeez) to transform that boring patch of dirt in your yard into a photo shoot–worthy garden without the stress of hand selecting which flowers to plant. A vibrant bee-watering station that'll double as a piece of art in your garden — it'll provide a buzz-worthy haven for your fave pollinators to hang in and recharge before they get back to work. They're called "busy bees" for a reason! A programmable timer to work some Fairy Godmother-like magic on your hose and transform it into a sprinkler. Bibbidi, Bobbidi, Boo-tiful lawn! Pruning shears, for anyone who has successfully created their own magical rose garden in their yard. Better get yourself a glass jar too to display it like in Beauty and the Beast. A cordless grass trimmer that'll help you tackle hard-to-reach areas in your garden bed or simply get the job done if you are the proud owner of a tiny patch of grass. And a long-handled lopper to help you trim any overgrown bushes or trees in your yard, a must-have for anyone who isn't Edward Scissorhands. A garden dibber to make planting bulbs, sowing seeds, and breaking up clumps of dirt easier than ever — every gardener should have one of these babies! A seeding square kit, so planting your lil' sprouts won't turn into a game of guess and check. You'll know *exactly* what pattern you planted your basil seeds in this year. A soaker hose you can attach to the hose you already own to provide your bushes, plants, and trees with the shower they've always dreamt of. A ready-to-spray bleach-free outdoor cleaner to help you tackle stubborn stains without having to break out a pressure washer (phew). It's made with a fast-foaming formula that's safe for plants (double phew). Fare thee well, backyard filth! And solar powered light-up flowers to make your boring old garden beds feel like Alice's Wonderland once night falls. Your friends won't be able to resist taking aesthetic Insta pics of them — imagine how whimsical they'll look with a cool filter added to them???

33 Products That'll Make Neat Freaks Swoon
33 Products That'll Make Neat Freaks Swoon

Buzz Feed

time2 days ago

  • Buzz Feed

33 Products That'll Make Neat Freaks Swoon

A ventilated cable management box if you're tired of tangled cords trapping your feet and offending your eyes. A bleach-free Wet & Forget shower cleaner for not only cleaning but preventing soap scum buildup with minimal effort. Once a week, simply give your shower a spray, let it sit overnight, rinse, and — BOOM — you're done and didn't even break a sweat. A pack of stain-lifting pads to take care of stains like freshly spilled wine or old pet accidents on your carpet without you even having to touch it. Simply lay down the pad, stomp, and let it sit. An electric power scrubber because you're *serious* about revitalizing that dirty tile grout. This gadget is equipped with an oscillating brush head that scrubs 60 times per SECOND — aka much faster than your human hands could ever. A food container lid organizer with five adjustable dividers that'll house all your square and round lids in one spot so no one ever again has to ask "Where's the lid for this?" A powerful mold and mildew stain cleaner so you can lift the most terrifying grout and caulking stains without the back-breaking scrubbing. Just apply the concentrated gel formula, wait six to eight hours, and watch stains (and your worries) wash down the drain. A patented ChomChom pet hair remover if Fido's shedding is taking over your home and clashing with your neat freak sensibilities. This uses bristles, not sticky tape, to catch lint meaning you can clean and reuse it over and over and over again. A beloved tub of pink cleaning paste for performing small cleaning miracles on virtually any surface in your home without endless, abrasive scrubbing. Try it out on those "forever" stains other solutions could never handle. A fume-free oven cleaner to get your oven looking like new by cutting through tough baked-on grease and stubborn stains without making your home smell like a vat of chemicals. A pack of reusable Swiffer mop pads that's a multitasking purchase you can use again and again for dry or wet cleaning. Sparkling floors and a permanently shorter shopping list? Yes, please! A set of stove gap fillers because being unable to get at all those stuck crumbs between your stove and counter hurts your clean-freak soul. With these, you can hide existing crumbs and prevent new ones by plugging up the gap with an easy-to-clean silicone cover. Welcome to a permanently cleaner kitchen. A microfiber EasyWring spin mop with a hands-free wringer that'll make it easier than ever to actually deep clean your floors. As if that wasn't tempting enough, this mop is designed to get into tight corners *and* is made with microfiber fabric that is machine washable and able to trap dirt with just plain ole water — no harsh cleaners needed. A pack of cleaning K-Cups since the inside of your Keurig is likely coated with residue from old brews. Now you can give your machine regular deep cleans in the same amount of time it takes to make a cup o' joe. Side effects may include better-tasting coffee. A microfiber window blind cleaner with three blades so you can clean the tops and bottoms of two blinds at once. It's effective and efficient — two of my favorite "E" words. A pack of versatile drawer dividers if you've got a catch-all drawer that straight-up haunts you. Give it a tool-free makeover with these extendable dividers that make it easy to create a custom layout that won't just help you get organized, but stay organized. A bottle of Angry Orange Pet Odor Eliminator for going to war against lingering stinks that just won't go away. This pet-safe formula was designed for use in boarding kennels and feedlots, so you can rest assured that the one corner your cat likes to pee in won't be too big of a job. A slender storage cabinet to transform that dead space in the corner into an aesthetic home for extra TP, cleaning supplies, and tissues that make your space feel cluttered. A pack of dishwasher-cleaning tablets because (to my shock and horror) you have to clean the thing that cleans your dishes, and these tablets make doing so as quick and easy the dishwasher. A reusable pumice stone so you can quickly take care of those unsightly rings and hard water stains that you've been scrubbing at in vain since forever. A hard water stain remover if you're tired of the questionable film making the shower glass look permanently foggy. Side effects might include running into your nearly invisible shower door — it'll be that clean. A pack of duster sponges designed with curved ridges for actually picking up dirt, dust, and hair on the first swipe instead of just moving it around. When you're done, give it a rinse, let it dry, and it'll be ready for another round. A scrub-free mold and mildew stain remover to take care of your nastiest cleaning challenges in seconds. Just spray the ready-made formula and watch stubborn stains and odors ~disappear~ right before your eyes. A portable vacuum with several attachments because being a clean freak isn't just for your house. This vacuum conveniently plugs into the car's aux outlet and has a SUPER long cord so you can easily suck up every mess (even ones in the backseat) on the go. A two-tier drawer organizer that creates functional storage out of the overcrowded abyss residing under your sink. Welcome to a whole new world where opening a cabinet doesn't trigger an avalanche of half-empty shampoo bottles and cleaning supplies. A powerful Eufy robot vacuum so you can get spotless floors without even having to lift a finger. It's got one impressive battery life and is so quiet you'll look up from your work only to realize the floors are cleaner than when you sat down. It's like hiring a cleaning person with 24/7 access. A pack of bedsheet suspenders if you're tired of waking up to a fitted sheet that refuses to stay put. These adjustable bands are super easy to install and work to keep your sheets appropriately tucked no matter how much tossing and turning you get up to during the night. A length-adjustable pet hair broom with rubber bristles for wrangling all the fur trapped in your carpet that your vacuum couldn't handle. If that's not enough to have you reaching for this broom constantly, there's also a built-in squeegee for corralling spilled liquids and cleaning glass. A wood polish to turn back the clock on worn-out furniture with a combination of beeswax and orange oil that conditions and protects wood while also hiding dings and scratches. A set of microfiber cloths because why bother cleaning if the glass is just going to look foggy anyway? These cloths will make sure your hard work doesn't go to waste with a 100% lint- and streak-free finish. A pack of shockingly absorbent Swedish dishcloths that can easily handle daily messes and are an eco-friendly alternative to single-use paper towels. They're super sturdy and can be sanitized in the dishwasher or microwave between clean-up jobs so you know they're not harboring any unwanted germs. A durable over-the-door shoe organizer to remind you that unused doors are a blank canvas for added storage, like this space-efficient rack that can hold up to 36 pairs of shoes. Let me repeat that — 36 pairs!! Consider that perma-pile of shoes by the door a goner. A double-layer cat litter-trapping mat if you're tired of constantly getting litter stuck to your feet. The water-resistant mat features a honeycomb design that traps litter between layers, so you can dump it back into your bin later. And for everything else, a jumbo pack of magic cleaning pads reviewers have likened to Magic Erasers with an extra-thick design that's even more durable. Time to make all those wall scruffs and grimy door stains ~disappear~.

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