Real Simple Solutions doesn't tell us how to achieve world peace, ease the oil crunch, or solve the balance-of-payment crisis. It does, however, provide priceless tips for removing an ink stain, slicing a grapefruit, or painting a room. Inspired by a perennially popular Real Simple magazine feature, the book organizes its jiffy-fix tricks by activity that cover cooking, cleaning, decorating, entertaining, dressing, grooming, working, and more.
Practical tips for everyday solutions. Simple and quick tips. No in depth reading to find what you are looking for. Probably can find the solutions on the internet but still good.
I plucked this off the free shelf at school. Read it in about an hour. It’s about 65% pictures ( nice photography!) and the rest is content that you mostly have already heard, isn’t great, and maybe 3% helpful.
Must helpful:
* hydrogen peroxide to clean your bathroom, ice trays to store jewelry and necklaces so they don’t tangle, and most valuable: run a wire hanger over your staticky dress and it will eliminate static. Can’t wait to try this.
This book is filled with helpful tips, I've read quite a few Nesting and How to Adult books and this book had a few things I've never seen before. It's also got my favorite type of layout that is spacious and clean feeling. ~Ashley
Read this over the course of a few days while eating lunch. I can’t believe this thing has the nerve to be $25. It’s skimpy on content, like RS assembled a bunch of scraps that weren’t good enough for the magazine and called the unfocused, random collection of snippets a book. Furthermore, you’ll probably already know about most of the “solutions.”
I keep changing my rating between 3 and 4. This book feels very much like reading a magazine. It has a lot of illustrations and is divided into small consistent sections, so it is easy to read in bits and pieces (while you have time). Although it is clearly an organized book, it still feels a bit like a bunch of random suggestions. Like anybody's shared wisdom (including written or verbal advice), you may find some of the suggestions silly, obvious, or simply not-your-style. However, shared wisdom can also lead to little tidbits of learning, spark your own new ideas, or even promote a new way of thinking/doing in your life. I did find there were some cute ideas in this book---probably nothing life-changing (in the largest sense of the word), but certainly worth making an effort to incorporate into my life. The problem is that I read this book in bits and pieces and moments, and I did not have a pen and paper, and I could not dog-ear the pages or rip them out (like you can in a magazine). Now, I feel I need to go back through the entire book and see what those good ideas were (and then rewrite them in my own more usable format). It is a pretty book, and it feels a bit like your mother (or a friend) is visiting your house and telling you what you should do about lots of different things around the house (static, missing earring backings, saggy boots, book labels, cords, stains) and how you could better do certain tasks (load the dishwasher, paint rooms, efficiently work at your desk). I appreciate advice much more than I used to, and there is no obligation to follow it, so for this I give it a 4 (I think).
This book really does have "real life" solutions that are fun and make perfect sense. My problem is that once I finish with an item, I get rid of it (depending on what it is), because I don't like clutter and I compartmentalize everything else (I'm OCD to the point where I even irritate myself), and so I don't always think of new ways to use old items. This book gave me some excellent pointers, and there's a grocery list (and this excites me) that I'm anxious to incorporate into my own because I LOVE making lists. I recommend this to everyone. The magazine is great, too.
This is a compilation of ideas on how to use the things you should already have to make life easier. I particularly liked all the ideas that it gave on using old items for multiple new uses. I very much like multitasking my stuff when I get the chance. It was definitely geared more for women than men. It would be interesting to see a version written for the garage and the workshop.
I think this has been my favorite of the Real Simple books. I am probably going to have to buy this one. I even marked pages for Jeffrey and Sloane to read. It really is full of tips and tricks to make your life more simple and beautiful.
Pretty pictures but I'm not really sure what to do with this book -- it's not like the subject matter makes it a good coffee table book, but it's not as good of a reference book as [Book: Martha Stewart's Homekeeping Handbook The Essential Guide to Caring for Everything in Your Home] .
Great book with lots of helpful hint to use every day things. Like used dryer sheets to clean soap scum off glass shower doors. Will definetly try that one.
This book is beautiful. I like the photos and the typeface of this book. This is good to place on a coffee table for guests and visitors to read when friends are being invited over for dinner.
I'm weird. I love flipping through books like this. The pictures manage to make the most mundane things seem elegant. Fun little ideas for organizing, cleaning, decorating.