20 Frugal Living Habits From the Great Depression Era | Frugal Living Tips | JENNIFER COOK

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  • Опубликовано: 3 июн 2024
  • #greatdepressionfrugallivingtips #frugalliving #frugalhabits

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @laurenromeo
    @laurenromeo 2 года назад +7

    I am an apron advocate 😆😆! I wear them every single day. This is one of the best & most affordable ways to preserve your clothes.

  • @lovecats6856
    @lovecats6856 3 года назад +191

    My gramma lived through the great depression. A trick she passed to Mum is to save the butter wrapper and use it to grease pans. It is surprising how much butter you can get off it.

    • @texasstardust6010
      @texasstardust6010 2 года назад +12

      ....my grandmother also lived through the Great Depression and I was taught this when I was about 11 or 12 ....I am in my 60' s now and we, as a society, need to get back to doing things that make sense and stop all this " more more more " mentality .

    • @jacquelynejohnson9127
      @jacquelynejohnson9127 2 года назад +1

      Done that, worked in a pizza parlor we put oil on pieces of wax paper to grease the square pans we made pizza in

    • @debbiee6535
      @debbiee6535 2 года назад +2

      I didn't know that I will try that

    • @Alex-gr8lv
      @Alex-gr8lv 2 года назад +3

      My mom does this and she was born in 1944...my grandmother and my great aunt taught her some great tips...my great aunt was born in 1900

    • @titalondonmrsbillskitchen1672
      @titalondonmrsbillskitchen1672 2 года назад

      Absolutely better than wasting it 😅🙌

  • @bghbgh6643
    @bghbgh6643 2 месяца назад +2

    I am an 80 yr old who really loves your tips. Have used a lot of them most of my life, raised by depression era parents, and have also learned a lot of new ideas too! I raised four Grandchildren with the idea that the more you do for yourself the better off you are. All four are in College that they earned the money to pay for and earned the scholarships & grants the Government offered through their hard work at their studies. Keep up the good work you are doing, it is helping a lot of future generations that you don’t hear from. God Bless you and your family!

  • @lindamcdermott5475
    @lindamcdermott5475 3 года назад +120

    Regarding the value of saving pocket change: My uncle recently passed, my cousin found in the recesses of his closet, buckets upon buckets of coins. My uncle, who grew up during the depression, saved his pocket change for his whole life. My cousin examined each coin for value, she had a list, then took the rest to the bank for deposit. She had enough money to remodel the house, adding another room, kitchen, deck, flooring, etc.

  • @merlehester113
    @merlehester113 3 года назад +63

    Give God the glory for those blessings. I am 79 and believe me we were very hard workers on the farm. We had cotton, tobacco and every tree you could think of for fruits to can or to dry for winter. We had a milk cow and hogs. We had a smoke house full of cured out pork for breakfast, etc 5 gal cans of lard, cracklins and the list goes on and on........Thank your Lord cause I bet they did.

  • @heatherm911
    @heatherm911 3 года назад +123

    On my first date with my husband - next to his car in the restaurant parking lot there was a bunch of coins on the ground. I started to pick them all up. He says that's when he knew that I was "the one" haha

    • @THEJENNIFERCOOK
      @THEJENNIFERCOOK  3 года назад +7

      That is the best story! I told my husband and he laughed. He would have done the same thing!

    • @petersack5074
      @petersack5074 3 года назад +1

      @@THEJENNIFERCOOK i would, too. why not? all reasons for picking are +++++++

    • @createelegance6792
      @createelegance6792 3 года назад

      Lol

    • @virginiawango3968
      @virginiawango3968 3 года назад

      Wow! That's something to think about 🤔.

    • @lynhanna917
      @lynhanna917 3 года назад +10

      I would go for walks with my son and his friends and it was amazing there was always coins on the ground (pennies, nickles and dimes) what I didn't know was these brats would walk ahead tossing coins on the ground because I would stop and pick up everything I saw. Might have only been 40 cents in total each time but man, I was making money.....

  • @yvonnejohnson2109
    @yvonnejohnson2109 3 года назад +87

    I opened my first saving account with pennies, I had $30.00 in pennies.

  • @ninakoinz8477
    @ninakoinz8477 3 года назад +151

    I bought an old lab coat at a thrift store. I wear the lab coat instead of an apron.
    Best fifty cents I've ever spent!😁

    • @THEJENNIFERCOOK
      @THEJENNIFERCOOK  3 года назад +10

      Great idea! A lot more coverage to prevent stains too!

    • @silviamonz2062
      @silviamonz2062 3 года назад +18

      Makes your cooking look like an experiment 😉🌸

    • @dbrunsrtrom
      @dbrunsrtrom 3 года назад +10

      When my kids were babies/toddlers, I wore a lab coat in the morning over my work clothes. No more showing up to work with goober stains on my thighs and shoulders. I kept it on from the moment I got dressed and didn't take it off until I was walking out of their daycare.

    • @bettychesna2165
      @bettychesna2165 3 года назад +10

      I wore my husband's old shirts over my regular clothes to keep from getting spots and stains while working in the kitchen or cleaning.

    • @janeyd5280
      @janeyd5280 2 года назад +3

      @@bettychesna2165 at school we were told to try to get hold of an old white shirt so we could make a white apron for cookery.!!

  • @gracewillow6632
    @gracewillow6632 2 года назад +33

    Money money $ I will forever appreciate this channel, you've helped my family alot, your videos, advice, lessons and funny words are inspirational and helpful to us. My wife and I have been able to be minimal, conscious in spending, saving and investing wisely, I now earn every week. You're such a blessing to this generation. we all love you

    • @brittanysophie6917
      @brittanysophie6917 2 года назад

      Money is an issue that everyone has for a better and luxurious life, life was hard for me until I started trading Bitcoin and now earning $22,000 per week

    • @graysonnickolas8772
      @graysonnickolas8772 2 года назад

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    • @margretpreston5614
      @margretpreston5614 2 года назад

      What interests me most is that she's a registered broker I just searched Mrs Camille Anne Hector now on Google and I'm kinda impressed 😍

  • @lynhanna917
    @lynhanna917 3 года назад +329

    back in the day you had good clothes and work clothes. If you went to school you came home, hung up your good school clothes and put on your play clothes. And those only got washed when they were actually dirty. My parents would buy "cheap"things but my aunt bought quality, cashmere sweaters, fancy towels, she also had her couches recovered when they were worn. I helped move her from her home to an apartment and the fancy towels I remember when I was a kid were still being used, the fancy satin binding was worn so she carefully removed it from the towels. The cashmere sweaters were still being worn and they were 40 years old and still in style. I was gifted my grandma's silver and rather than save it for "good" I use it every day and I enjoy using something that belonged to grandma.

    • @martiejohnson9376
      @martiejohnson9376 3 года назад +21

      I had forgotten about the good clothes and the work clothes . Thanks for reminding me about this one.

    • @catharineinniss9906
      @catharineinniss9906 3 года назад +24

      I still like the good clothes and work clothes. And I work from home!

    • @littlesongbird1
      @littlesongbird1 3 года назад +13

      I kind of still have this. Now that I work remotely: I have clothes I wear when I know I am not leaving the house (not pj's or sweats but maybe older jeans and t-shirts) and then I have clothes for leaving the house in (non ripped jeans and a non stained shirt) and nicer clothes if say I am going to visit friends or family. Since I mostly need things from the first two options and I can buy the last one second hand, I save a lot on clothes.

    • @WilletteB
      @WilletteB 3 года назад +9

      Thanks for this trip down memory lane. We did the same thing growing up. I still do it today.

    • @annarodriguez9868
      @annarodriguez9868 3 года назад +21

      @@littlesongbird1 Same here! I have 2 pairs of very comfy old baggy jeans. I kept my husband's pocket t-shirts after he passed away and wear them around the house and for gardening.
      I donated all his good clothes and suits, but I kept a couple of his long sleeve casual shirts to wear on cool days instead of a sweater. His stretched out athletic sox were always good dust rags so I kept those, too. It's kind of nice to feel he's still helping me when I use the things he liked.

  • @sharenshoemaker1982
    @sharenshoemaker1982 3 года назад +347

    I am 72 years old and I still do all of these. We are out of debt and have savings and food storage.

    • @denasharpe2393
      @denasharpe2393 3 года назад +10

      So peaceful....

    • @joannhaun6599
      @joannhaun6599 3 года назад +21

      Same here. I'm 63 and grew up with little (but enough : )

    • @patwagner9308
      @patwagner9308 3 года назад +28

      So am I ! And I still do all of these, too. When she said hang laundry outdoors, I smiled. I love hanging ALL of our laundry outdoors during the mild weather. Everything lasts longer (dryers are hard on fabric...all that dryer lint is not surface lint) & smells wonderful. Pulling a top over your head that's been dried outdoors, breathing in that scent, is so nice !

    • @martiejohnson9376
      @martiejohnson9376 3 года назад +15

      I am proud of you. You should see just how few people can say this. You must be doing something right. Keep up the good work.

    • @gingereaves4097
      @gingereaves4097 3 года назад +18

      @@patwagner9308 One summer I started hanging clothes outside to dry to save electricity. My 4 year old told my 75 year old neighbors that his mom had invented a new way to dry clothes. We all laughed as they had grown up doing that as had I.

  • @agneseigaune8338
    @agneseigaune8338 3 года назад +85

    Glad there are still people in the world who aren't sucked in the consumerism trap

  • @EverglowMoon
    @EverglowMoon 3 года назад +48

    My dad still wraps our gifts in the colored Sunday "funnies". It just wouldn't be a gift from him without that. If I got the newspaper, I would do the same for others. Thanks for the tips!

    • @lynhanna917
      @lynhanna917 2 года назад +1

      I never have tape so presents get duct tape. I had a real chuckle when my son sent me a box and inside was a gift sealed with duct tape.

  • @jbtpa895
    @jbtpa895 3 года назад +74

    I have a separate closet that I rehang clothes that I've only worn for a few hours. Don't need washed yet but I don't put them back with the clean ones.

  • @elizabethbednarcik3311
    @elizabethbednarcik3311 3 года назад +53

    My dad always said, “turn the lights off” or “shut the door, we’re not heating the whole neighborhood!”

    • @oldgeezer2780
      @oldgeezer2780 3 года назад +3

      "Turn the lights off" was drilled into us in our youth. I kid my partner that his parents were rich. He looked at me funny. At 60-something, he's *just starting* to get the habit of turning lights off when he leaves the room.
      We've replaced the igniter in the oven, and one of the burners on the stovetop. It's 18 years old. Reading *how* to do it took longer than doing it. Both toilets have had innards replaced - by us. I think part of the "throw it out mentality " is because people have zero idea how simple some of these things are. In contrast, calling someone to repair a washing machine could well cost more than a new one.

    • @petersack5074
      @petersack5074 3 года назад +1

      @@oldgeezer2780 yup...handymen are in short supply, as most people, (guys) can only work their phones, and tv in their 'man' cave......what the hell is that....a lazy persons' couch, to drink beer and get fat n' lazzy....

    • @mrslhaldane306
      @mrslhaldane306 3 года назад +3

      my dad used to yell "were you born in a barn"

    • @titalondonmrsbillskitchen1672
      @titalondonmrsbillskitchen1672 2 года назад

      Lol I like that one 🤣

  • @karengreen2437
    @karengreen2437 3 года назад +264

    My grandparents on my moms side were born in 1911/1917. My grandfather had to quit school in the 3rd grade (yes 3rd) to help support his family. When he married my grandmother, he was a foreman on a farm. They made very little. They had a farm, raised crops, chickens, hogs, cows and they canned their own food and butchered their own meat. I recently found my grandmother “budget”-she just wrote out where everything went per paycheck on a piece of paper. She did it to the penny-literally. Because they made so little it was things like .35 to church, .15 to missions at church, 1.15 grocery. They also bartered for what they didn’t have. My grandfather had the contraption to make their own syrup/molasses and they would do that and take the excess to barter. My grandmother washed clothes once a week-it was a big day. Monday she would boil the water, wash the clothes, wrong them out (eventually she would have the hand crank wringer), hang them on the line to dry. Bring them in and iron them on Tuesday. She had her system. She made 3 meals a day (lunch she would have to make enough to feed the farm hands too). They were very frugal with what they had but they always shared with others. There is so much we could all learn from them (I wish they were here to ask them all the questions).

    • @THEJENNIFERCOOK
      @THEJENNIFERCOOK  3 года назад +39

      Karen thank you from the bottom of my heart for sharing your story! I absolutely loved hearing all about your grandparents. ❤🤗

    • @rao433
      @rao433 3 года назад +38

      These were frugal people with a rich heart.

    • @a11px6
      @a11px6 3 года назад +13

      Sounds like my great grandmother, who was born during that time. What a woman!

    • @sharonh.harris1924
      @sharonh.harris1924 3 года назад +18

      Karen, I could have written this about my Grandparents. I remember spending a week or two in the summer with her and helping her with wash day. She had a wash house beside the well house with clotheslines between the two. Papa would get the wood up and fill the huge iron pot with water and start the fire. Then she started. She shaved lye soap into the iron pot. She had the wringer and two rinsing tubs. Then starching, hanging out and, finally, after lunch, she started ironing while watching the soap operas. She set up in the den with the black and white TV and watched As The World Turns and Guiding Light as she ironed through everything and put away. She had a candle on the end of her ironing board that she rubbed the iron over to make it slick. She used a Pepsi bottle with a corked sprinkler top to sprinkle the clothes to create the steam. She didn't have closets, but wardrobes. I still have her cedar wardrobe. I still miss As The World Turns and Guiding Light and so many other soaps.........

    • @karengreen2437
      @karengreen2437 3 года назад +9

      @@sharonh.harris1924 oh my goodness-sounds identical to my grandma and papa. She had the same water spritzer snd all.....and soap operas. It was hard work but I know it was better times in some respect. I know I look back with great memories. And I never heard her complain, ever

  • @inbedduringcovid3005
    @inbedduringcovid3005 3 года назад +21

    Thank you. You may be surprised how many people still hates grandmas ways but the still praise her giving and cooking. They don't seem to realize how everything grandma and grandpa did went hand and hand. "If you take care of the pennies the dollars would take care of themselves" 👏🙏

  • @marilehtinen1495
    @marilehtinen1495 3 года назад +35

    You just described my life style. I'm 45 years ole gal from Finland. Many finns share these frugal habits even today.

    • @makingsense8738
      @makingsense8738 2 года назад +1

      My friend from Finland used to tear plastic bags into thin strips, braid them and then sew them into a circular rug for the kitchen. She wasted nothing.

    • @marilehtinen1495
      @marilehtinen1495 2 года назад +1

      @@makingsense8738 my aunt made these rugs when I was little.

  • @laurasimmer9612
    @laurasimmer9612 3 года назад +40

    I was raised by my great grandmother (until I was 9 years old - when she passed) & then my nana raised me (she passed last year 💔) The older I got, the more grateful I became for the both of them ❤ They taught me so much. I'm now 24 years old. I cook in their cast iron skillets & I would say I'm extremely frugal... I've been an extreme couponer for over 2 years now. I find all of these things normal. It was how I was raised 🤷‍♀️

    • @chiarac3833
      @chiarac3833 4 месяца назад

      Hold on to that cast iron skillet, I have my grandma's and they don't make them like that anymore.

  • @janicew6222
    @janicew6222 3 года назад +36

    My Daddy was born in 1908, he use to say watch the pennies and the dollars will follow, also if you can live on a little you can live on a lot, but if you can't live on a little you will never live on a lot. Great tips. I always wear an apron, can't imagine not wearing one. I hang clothes out on the line whenever possible.

    • @lindapowell2397
      @lindapowell2397 2 года назад

      Not everyone is blessed to be living in a house...I'm in an apartment so hanging laundry outside isn't an option.. I use a clothes rack to dry many thing's on. Laundry room in the building...$1.50 a load. I definitely reware clothing & handwash several things.

  • @7kikkertjes
    @7kikkertjes 3 года назад +30

    My greatgrandmother was born in The Netherlands in 1912. During the hunger winter of 1944 she had what they called ´sliding cheese'. You would put a little slither of cheese on the end of a slice of bread and ´slide´ it down while taking small bites of the bread. The idea was that the smell of cheese would make it easier to imagine the taste. Needless to say no one in my family would ever have dared to throw food away in her presence.

    • @danielaandres6981
      @danielaandres6981 2 года назад +1

      Schiebewurst! I read about it in a novel about WW II.

  • @normagilbert5310
    @normagilbert5310 3 года назад +27

    My family wanted a down payment for our home. We had everyone, including young children of school age, must write down everything they buy, even a nickel bubble gum. My children became aware of what they were buying and chose not to buy, as well as the parents. It surprised me how much we saved. I am now 74 and both my children have told me that this experience really made an impression on them and both kids pay with cash and never in debt. We made our goal and had our house built.

  • @73cidalia
    @73cidalia Год назад +3

    My grandparents never went through the Great Depression because they lived in the Azores (Portugal). They did, however, do a lot of these things and more because they were poor their whole lives and the island they lived on was technologically behind (lagging behind continental Portugal). No running water, no In-home electricity, no hot water heater nor furnace, kerosene lamps, outhouses, no gas stoves (wood stoves made of concrete), etc. Think Little House on the Prairie but it lasted until almost the 1970s for most people if not longer.

  • @gerarda8182
    @gerarda8182 3 года назад +18

    At the age of 63 i use most of your 21 tips for years. Saved/saves a lot of money. Inspiring to hear them from a new generation. Thanks and greetings from the Netherlands 🇳🇱

  • @christinebutler7630
    @christinebutler7630 3 года назад +236

    I still have my mother's and grandmother's cast iron cookware, Revere cookware, Corning Ware and Pyrex...my kitchen spans 1890-1955. I'll never replace it!

    • @timvandermey4792
      @timvandermey4792 3 года назад +5

    • @mariemiller8740
      @mariemiller8740 3 года назад +9

      Christine Butler that is wonderful you have that.Big blessing as you have memories attached to the people who used them

    • @kich6172
      @kich6172 3 года назад +6

      Yes! I go to resale shops looking for these before buying new if I need to replace a pot or dish also.

    • @martiejohnson9376
      @martiejohnson9376 3 года назад +9

      I would never replace it either. I tell you, my mother really knew how to cook the best food in her cast iron pans.

    • @Vera4962
      @Vera4962 3 года назад +10

      @@afunlife9601 Your son must not know how much the Pyrex is going for now !

  • @dottief6057
    @dottief6057 3 года назад +215

    I'm a 78 year old great grandmother and I practice most of these habits on a regular basis. My dryer doesn't run often if the weather is decent. I am concerned about the younger generations when the going gets rough again, and I think it will.

    • @THEJENNIFERCOOK
      @THEJENNIFERCOOK  3 года назад +17

      I agree 👍

    • @SpecialtyNetworking
      @SpecialtyNetworking 3 года назад +25

      The younger generation age about 30 down can barely read. They dont even bother teaching most subjects anymore. Try asking a 20 year old to do a math problem without a calculator.

    • @martiejohnson9376
      @martiejohnson9376 3 года назад +16

      I am with you. There are so many reasons that the younger generation will suffer . One they seem to only know about electronic devices . The government has a lot to do with this. The government didn't let parents correct their kids when needed, it was always, Go to time out. Two the government gave less money to the schools for programs like Home Ec., Wood shop , Automotive and such. And they actually stopped teaching History as it really did take place. Yet , if these kids had parents that took the time to teach them things like cooking, how to work with wood, and things like this they might know some skills to survive . Yet they have missed a lot.

    • @eileenmarie1652
      @eileenmarie1652 3 года назад +23

      @@SpecialtyNetworking agreed, and I’m a 17 year old girl. I am so lucky to have parents who took the time to teach me to do things myself. While I haven’t needed to do them, it’s very useful to know. And I’m always striving to find more things I can do. My mom has so many books on how to do things yourself and I love reading them to learn more things that I didn’t know.

    • @gingereaves4097
      @gingereaves4097 3 года назад +14

      @@SpecialtyNetworking I am a retired teacher (43 years), and many do try to teach, but parents (even those of college students) don't expect their children to get bad grades even if they didn't do the work. They expect teachers to give bonus points and to continue to extend deadlines for them. I have taught grades 7 through college, and I even had another college professor write her daughter's term paper. When I gave the daughter and F, the mother called me and said her daughter "helped!" Administrators often don't back the teachers, so many quit teaching or quit trying. My 3 granddaughters can do math without a calculator as well as are reading 3-4 grades above their grade level. They let their children run the show. It's sad! My adult children are shocked at the ignorance of their peers and colleagues!

  • @alanbirkner1958
    @alanbirkner1958 3 года назад +186

    Never use a credit card unless you can pay it off completely by the end of the month. Tina

    • @gingereaves4097
      @gingereaves4097 3 года назад +7

      I tried to teach my math students about that. I pay for groceries, gasoline, etc. with a card that earns points to get cash back and another that earns airline miles. I paid for 2 airline tickets this past year (one cost $369 and the other was over $1,000) just by using my card to buy my everyday purchases and paying my bill in full every month.

    • @monicas2269
      @monicas2269 3 года назад +3

      That's how I use mine.

    • @pbear7814
      @pbear7814 2 года назад

      Always!

    • @ShirasongMusic
      @ShirasongMusic 2 года назад +3

      Credit cards make good scrapers...I😅

    • @user-tk7kz1fl2r
      @user-tk7kz1fl2r 2 года назад +2

      I pay it off automatically each month. Surely we should just use a debit card?

  • @wanderingtwin1900
    @wanderingtwin1900 3 года назад +165

    S&H Green Stamps, remember them, we also out grew our pants before we got another pair, kids laughed at us for wearing "high waters" which are cool today, if our clothes got torn we sewed them up, today they wear them torn up, a pot of beans and some corn bread it usually lasted two or three days, I was an adult when I first ate at Mcdonalds, wish I could go back and not do that, lol, I'm almost 60 and this world is so different than the one I grew up in, Peace

    • @ladywytch129
      @ladywytch129 3 года назад +23

      I spent a good deal of my childhood with scarves around the ankles of my jeans. My mom would sew them on so I could get another year out of them. It was a very bohemian look that I still utilize to this day!

    • @wwashington270
      @wwashington270 3 года назад +4

      👍👍

    • @TheSwissHillbilly
      @TheSwissHillbilly 3 года назад +11

      @@ladywytch129 My Mom sewed rug fringe onto the bottoms of one pair of pants when I outgrew them. They were the coolest!

    • @carolwasson1570
      @carolwasson1570 3 года назад +5

      Ah yes, flood pants! I wish capris were a thing when I was a kid!

    • @judyrichardson7372
      @judyrichardson7372 3 года назад +5

      I save the high water pants and my Kids wear them in the summer time as capris. My youngest daughter was big into dresses (noth lacey) just regular fabric dresses. Once she out grow them height wise, she would them as shirts.

  • @mariemedeiros5672
    @mariemedeiros5672 3 года назад +76

    Many of these tips are great for the environment. Recycle, and reuse

  • @debratorntore9539
    @debratorntore9539 2 года назад +3

    I find that when you use a lot of these great ideas , you don’t have the want to go to the store as often. Because your always looking to see what else you can salvage from the garbage. It gives you a great feeling , and your helping the family by not spending as much.

  • @deborahsilva3847
    @deborahsilva3847 3 года назад +45

    Yeah, my parents were depression era children so I remember the turn off the lights, stop running the water, tin foil , having to learn how to sew and my mother telling us that she wasn’t a short order cook. You know what, they were right and I learned a lot from them. Glad to see you doing a channel on frugality. There are a lot of people who need to learn these skills.

    • @wandatonkin2065
      @wandatonkin2065 Год назад

      Yes, never called aluminum foil in Southern Ga. called tin foil because the tin looked like a tin roof, therefore, covered a dish like a roof.

  • @christinebutler7630
    @christinebutler7630 3 года назад +129

    My mom always had a pot of soup on the stove, and soup was made of any and every little leftover bit that wasn't enough to go back on the table by itself, but was perfectly good. Soup and bread made many a meal!

    • @annarodriguez9868
      @annarodriguez9868 2 года назад +18

      One time my dad had bought a little roast chicken for his dinner and I saved the skin and the bones for soup. I simmered them and added a diced potato, a couple of carrots, an ear of corn and half a head of cabbage. He said that was the best soup he had ever had since my mom passed away. My dad is not big on compliments so that was pretty special considering I'm not an especially good cook, that's my sister's department.

    • @bonitajanssen745
      @bonitajanssen745 2 года назад +4

      @@annarodriguez9868
      GOOOD IDEA!!!!!!💖

    • @annarodriguez9868
      @annarodriguez9868 2 года назад +11

      @@bonitajanssen745 Thank you! Now I have to share my mom's emergency hot dog stew. Mom hadn't been grocery shopping yet and she was just going to make a couple of hot dogs for my sister and me while she finished the laundry. My aunt had an emergency and dropped off her 4 kids. Not enough hot dogs! Mom thought for a moment. She took out the little soup pot and diced a large potato in 2 cups of water to simmer. She slit the hot dogs the long way and then cut them into circles, added a can of peas and a small can of tomato sauce. All of us kids loved it, including one of the kids who hated peas! Lol!
      That was in the 1950s. Fast forward to early 80's and my kids call it Pac-Man stew.

    • @bonitajanssen745
      @bonitajanssen745 2 года назад +3

      @@annarodriguez9868
      I just wrote down that recipe! So easy!!!
      THEY FORGET HOW TO COOK BECAUSE THEY EAT OUT TO MUCH! I’m German, WE KNOW OUR SOUPS !
      Thank you - it just takes some imagination?

    • @annarodriguez9868
      @annarodriguez9868 2 года назад +7

      @@bonitajanssen745 Add a little pinch of desperation to create wonderful stews and soups! 😉

  • @loriar1027
    @loriar1027 3 года назад +5

    1. Reuse aluminum foil
    2. Eat everything in your plate or don’t dear at all
    3. Turn off the lights
    4. Cut coupons for purchases
    5. Reuse glass jars
    6. Fix it before you replace it
    7. Pay with cash not credit
    8. Save your spare change
    9. Reuse newspapers
    10. Mend your clothes
    11. Use old toothbrushes for cleaning
    12. Pick up found coins
    13. Cook from scratch-not “convenience” food
    14. Have yard sales to get rid of your junk
    15. Shop with a grocery list
    16. Have a garden to grow produce and trade stuff with neighbors
    17. Take care of your things so they last
    18. Wash less often-clothes and towels
    19. Line dry your clothes (smells awesome!)
    20. Buy only what you need, not what you can afford
    Bonus: wear an apron to protect your clothes

  • @hepzibah5773
    @hepzibah5773 3 года назад +14

    I laughed at your opening line. My father used to call out something about shutting the lights when you left a room! I'm 90 and I still remember to shut the lights when leaving a room! (No jokes please. I'm talking about electric lights, not candles.)

  • @rachaelt3294
    @rachaelt3294 2 года назад +2

    I repair everything since I don't have a large income for our family. The other day I busted out the sewing machine and fixed towels, curtains, underwear, and pieces of clothing.. ❤️

  • @lauriem2053
    @lauriem2053 3 года назад +165

    I like watching Great Depression Cooking with Clara here on RUclips. She passed in 2013 but I love her personality, and her frugal cooking tips. We always grow at least tomatoes every year, and they are so easy. We usually save change over the course of the year for a mini vacation, but this last year with very little travel we bought a new mattress with our change we cashed in.

    • @jonnaborosky8836
      @jonnaborosky8836 3 года назад +15

      I love those videos of Cooking with Clara. She was a true gem!

    • @denaboyd8058
      @denaboyd8058 3 года назад +7

      I love Clara so much!!!

    • @sharonh.harris1924
      @sharonh.harris1924 3 года назад +9

      I love garden fresh. But, unfortunately, it is much more expensive compared to the work involved. When I can buy a can of corn for $1 or 4 ears for $2 I might was well buy it than go to the trouble to grow it. By the time I buy the seeds, the equipment such as hoe, tiller and make a fenced in garden (due to deer and pests), it's already too expensive. Then there is the work. In SC, it's HOT in the summer! Only if you really love it, is it worth it. Thank God for farmers and those who grow, process and transport our food!!!

    • @LizaBeckerman
      @LizaBeckerman 3 года назад +4

      me too! She was so cute

    • @martiejohnson9376
      @martiejohnson9376 3 года назад +2

      Thanks for the tip. I will have to look u[ Great Depression Cooking with Clara.

  • @TheNinnyfee
    @TheNinnyfee 3 года назад +26

    Newspapers are also great in damp shoes to soak up the water.
    I remember cleaning cloths made out of old clothes like shirts or undershirts that weren't wearable any longer.

    • @avanellehansen4525
      @avanellehansen4525 2 года назад

      I cut up thrifted flannel sheets for toileting. The clean ones are folded in a basket and used ones go in a diaper pail or any pot with a lid

    • @jacquelynejohnson9127
      @jacquelynejohnson9127 2 года назад +1

      Living with Dad now who is 87 , there are rags all around made from various material.

  • @bruce5895
    @bruce5895 3 года назад +150

    Tip # 37 for saving your money, learn how to grow your own garden and preseve what you grow.

    • @jturtle5318
      @jturtle5318 3 года назад +9

      I've gardened for 50 years, now with a focus on permaculture and raising the herbs I use as an herbalist.
      Next project is a lilac path for my disabled grand niece. I drove 60 miles for yellow lilac saplings.

    • @bruce5895
      @bruce5895 3 года назад +4

      @@jturtle5318 I call that pure devotion to the art of gardening, good for you !!

    • @janinedear-barlow
      @janinedear-barlow 3 года назад +5

      I will be getting a garden soon and can't wait to grow my own veg. I have started dehydrating foods for my pantry. I want to learn to can but the price to get one in the UK is ridiculous so will have to wait a bit before we can afford one.

    • @lynhanna917
      @lynhanna917 2 года назад +1

      @@janinedear-barlow go to farming communities that have seniors retirement or seniors meetings and put ads on their notice boards saying you are looking for used canning supplies and canner. Watch you tube videos to know what you want. This is also where I go for good used cars. A woman who can no longer do canning would like to see her supplies go to someone just starting out and she may not even want money in exchange.

    • @janinedear-barlow
      @janinedear-barlow 2 года назад

      @@lynhanna917 ok I'll try that. Do you mean on Facebook?

  • @martiejohnson9376
    @martiejohnson9376 3 года назад +21

    Both of my parents were married at the time of the great depression and a lot of the things you mentioned were things they did. For instance we always hung our clothes to dry . Yup , I also helped with that task. They repurposed everything that could be repurposed . Glass jars were one of these also empty cans were washed and dried and used for pencil holders ( I still do this one ). They kept everything that could be used later for something or other. They canned a lot of stuff. If they didn't have a garden they would go to the packing houses and buy crates of seasonal fruits and vegetables, not many people had freezers back then. Women knew how to sew, quilt, knit or crochet, embroder and such. Men knew how to hunt, fix just about everything like cars, electrical and could build a house if needed. And our new generation wants to blame our grand parent and parents generation of the things that are going on today. I always say "Excuse Me, but is that your adult reasoning for todays' problems? " I just had to say that. ; ) Thank you for letting us visit memory lane. I really miss my parents and Grandparents. They were the generation that knew how to live. It seems to have been harder in some ways yet they were always closer to their families .

  • @17topaz
    @17topaz 3 года назад +102

    I run errands once a week only to save on fuel costs .

    • @oldgeezer2780
      @oldgeezer2780 3 года назад +13

      My Mom taught Home Ec. I remember back in the day (mid seventies!) when the cost of gas started to go up, Mom started calculating the cost of going to various stores to buy things on sale. She found (and Amy Dacyczyn of Tightwad Gazette confirmed) that driving to too many stores negated the savings one might accrue buying veggies one place and chicken someplace else.
      Gosh, I remember the day Mom and dad came home with something like 25 whole chickens to put in the freezer downstairs...
      There's more to it than fuel costs, too. Every time one goes to the store there's a tendency to add a few impulse items.

    • @ingerfalch-jacobsen1717
      @ingerfalch-jacobsen1717 3 года назад +5

      None of this makes any sense - I walk to the store(s).

    • @stepone6159
      @stepone6159 3 года назад +4

      @@oldgeezer2780 Yes. You go in to buy 1 or 2 and come out with 15. Me and some friends laugh about the fact that we all do it.

    • @dottief6057
      @dottief6057 3 года назад +6

      @@ingerfalch-jacobsen1717 I would have to walk 16 miles.

    • @ingerfalch-jacobsen1717
      @ingerfalch-jacobsen1717 3 года назад +8

      @@dottief6057 One of the perks of living in a city/town - or whatever you'd call "Oslo, Norway" - is walking distance for everything essential.

  • @HEATHERFREE2486
    @HEATHERFREE2486 3 года назад +46

    Yes my grandma folded up foil, plastic bags, reused any containers-especially cool whip containers and that was her “Tupperware”.

    • @LisjeVal
      @LisjeVal 3 года назад +2

      My mom called it "Polish Tupperware" - not as a slur, but because mostly they were the newer and frugal immigrants then and not part of what would later become called "yuppies" who surrounded us. I still don't spend MONEY on plastic storage containers!

    • @hopesmith7214
      @hopesmith7214 3 года назад +1

      Cool whip containers are the best! That is my tupperware as well, I love the way she thinks!

    • @martiejohnson9376
      @martiejohnson9376 3 года назад

      Sounds like my Mom. Nothing was wasted ever.

  • @sharonh.harris1924
    @sharonh.harris1924 3 года назад +10

    My grandparents were born from 1898 to 1914. So same thing. One pair of grandparents were small farmers and the other pair were a minister. My Grandparents went through the Great Depression, WWI and WWII, the greatest generation. My parents were most affected and then my generation. The next generation have no idea! LOL! I remember my grandmothers deconstructing clothes and saving everything. They had button jars. They re-wound thread on wooden spools. They kept zippers and snaps. Then they used the fabric to make smaller clothes such as children's clothes, or use the scraps to make pot holders, quilts, rags, rag rugs. You didn't let anything go to waste. My Grandma bought my Daddy overalls 3 times his size and roll the legs up. She let them out as he grew. I actually still have his first two pairs of overalls. I remember them re-using mail. For instance, replying by writing in the margins and steaming the envelopes open and turning them inside out and re-gluing to re-use the envelopes. Any paper that still had space, could be used for notes, recipes, quilt patterns, etc. I still always pick up coins. My husband won't use coins but it's MONEY! We used to help our grandmothers fill the stamp books (my first couple of years of marriage, I also saved and cashed in green stamps). They still made their own lye soap for cleaning and washing clothes. I hung clothes as a kid and teen (I remember my Grandma's wash day on the farm with the wringer, drawing water from the well, the iron pot on the fire, the starching, the hanging) but I haven't since I got our first dryer. They saved bread bags and twist ties! My generation is the last one that has memories from those who actually lived the Great Depression. All I can do is tell stories to the next generation but they didn't live it. I still hate wasting food because I can hear my Grandparents in my head.

  • @starkravenwild791
    @starkravenwild791 3 года назад +183

    "make do or do without" Grandma saved all the buttons and zippers off worn out clothes to use again!!

    • @wagoner1943
      @wagoner1943 3 года назад +7

      "Eat it up, wear it out. Make it do or do without."

    • @deepabahadur9164
      @deepabahadur9164 3 года назад +10

      I even today remove buttons,zippers and strings from the pyjamas,before discarding

    • @neloferhalai5530
      @neloferhalai5530 3 года назад +1

      @@deepabahadur9164 t1

    • @annarodriguez9868
      @annarodriguez9868 3 года назад +8

      @@deepabahadur9164 I don't remove buttons and zippers from clothes that I am donating, but yes, save those items as everything is getting more expensive and also hard to find.

    • @ninakoinz8477
      @ninakoinz8477 3 года назад +11

      I love button jars!

  • @victoriathomas721
    @victoriathomas721 3 года назад +20

    I spent 4 hours researching and watching RUclips videos yesterday and fixed my vacuum! It was such a great feeling knowing that I saved hundreds of dollars, plus I was pretty proud!

    • @cherylT321
      @cherylT321 3 года назад +1

      That’s great!

    • @debgordon6542
      @debgordon6542 Год назад

      My daughter and I have fixed our AC and replaced all of our toilets by following RUclips videos. Can't tell you how much money we've saved :-)

  • @catherinemcgill3004
    @catherinemcgill3004 3 года назад +20

    I used to live in the country and always line dried our clothes, even though I owned a dryer. Now I live in a city and I still line dry my clothes inside. Clothes last longer this way. Aprons are also a must!

  • @deborahroper3694
    @deborahroper3694 3 года назад +151

    Jennifer, I love this video. I can totally relate to everything on this list . I was born in 1959. I remember my mom being do big when she was pregnant that I would , at 6 years old, go out to the clothes line and I would bend over and get the cloth diapers out of the basket and hand them to my mom. She would give them a good shake out ‘till they popped and pin the on the line with wooden clothes pins. She cleaned and boiled glass baby bottles. And she used cloth diapers with safety pins. I loved the smell of clean laundry to this day. There was something about the sunshine that gave those white wavy diapers blowing in the wind. And The HoneySuckle was awesome. I now purchase wax melts that are HoneySuckle scented. Also, those aprons might be made from an old dress, but they were there to protect the dress they were wearing that day. One last thing, I think people not only think everything is disposable these days, but they think marriages and relationships are disposable as well. We took care of those and maintained them as well. Big 👍 on this video.

    • @donnawilkerson7038
      @donnawilkerson7038 3 года назад +16

      TRUTH! We just have to be a good example to them all, that this world is not disposable, nor the people or relationships in it!

    • @sharonh.harris1924
      @sharonh.harris1924 3 года назад +4

      I too love honeysuckle! I remember all the same things. I don't like to hang clothes outside today worrying about pollution. I'm glad I have a washer and dryer since I remember the old ways. They worked so hard!

    • @meleenabradley3017
      @meleenabradley3017 3 года назад +2

      My dryer has gone out twice since I've been married, almost 25 years, and I had no problem making a temporary clothesline, but the reaction of my coworkers and some acquaintances were 😱 and then asking me about when I was going to buy a new one! Nope not in our house we buy till it's Really Dead!

    • @mygoodlife204
      @mygoodlife204 3 года назад +9

      I think the rest of the world are still hanging their washing on lines! Only America😒

    • @bonniematthews1080
      @bonniematthews1080 2 года назад +2

      I’ve got to say those cloth diapers were horrible. I was so grateful to Mr. Pampers, but they were so expensive that I only used them for the babies when we went on a trip. I have such vivid memories of my aunt ( she had 6 kids) taking the diapers off the line in the Conn. winter and they would be frozen stiff. She would stand them up vertically and struggle to get them back in the basket.

  • @firegirl441fromga6
    @firegirl441fromga6 2 года назад +1

    Hubby and I became debt free in 2011…best feeling in this world! I was injured on the job as a paramedic in 2008 when a 461 lb man fell on me and ruptured my lower back and my hubby suffered two strokes in March 2011 and became disabled as he couldn’t do his jobs as firefighter or EMT anymore so we cashed in our retirement and paid off both vehicles and our home and we live off our disability payments. We learned to live off much less and cut out everything we could live without. Great thing is the pandemic didn’t affect us. Hubby and I pay with cash and when it’s gone we do without until the next month!

  • @vajee5
    @vajee5 2 года назад +2

    I utilize so many of these tips.
    I didn’t realize it was frugal.
    It just seemed smart.

  • @reginafisher9919
    @reginafisher9919 3 года назад +21

    Always ask for extra condiments and napkins when going through the drive-thru

  • @brendasparks6234
    @brendasparks6234 3 года назад +33

    Loved the tips. I’m 61 so I have lived most of what you where saying but have gotten caught up in the world. So this new year my goals were to become more of a minimalist and meditate more with the Lord and God brought me your channel. So thank you for sharing

  • @abcxyz1797
    @abcxyz1797 3 года назад +13

    My parents were married in 1929, and for a while had to live in a tar paper covered cardboard box. They had three children to provide for. I came along in 1952, and remember everything you are talking about, and still practice most things. One of my fond memories is pasting S&H green stamps into books, to shop for items.

  • @dazita
    @dazita 3 года назад +12

    I'm Colombian and my grandma always taught me things like these, love her for that 😂💖

  • @jeanlilley4149
    @jeanlilley4149 3 года назад +17

    Hi Jenny. I’m 73 next month and I’ve been doing all 20 things all my adult life. I was bought up with my mother and grandparents in same house. Very good video. Thank you xxx

  • @annguglielmino8989
    @annguglielmino8989 3 года назад +16

    My parents were born in 1918 & 1921 and I grew up with most of these things and taught them to my children who are in their 30's. And yes, it was Tinfoil.😊 And Icebox, not refrigerator.

  • @scottmiller1956
    @scottmiller1956 2 года назад +2

    My Granny was a young mother of 3 when the Great Depression hit.
    Luckily, she was a farm wife so they were able to grow most of their food at home.
    Not to say it wasn't hard though...jeez, the stories she had to tell!

  • @cynthiahumphrey1718
    @cynthiahumphrey1718 3 года назад +32

    Yes on the apron! Use everything up and wear it out. I remember quilts made out of scrap fabric from dresses and backed with feed sack or flour sack material. There really was no trash!

    • @justmepraying
      @justmepraying 3 года назад +5

      I have the last one that my grandmother made it's about 150 year's old I get it out once in a while just to look at it and I love it so.

    • @cynthiahumphrey1718
      @cynthiahumphrey1718 3 года назад +6

      @@justmepraying what a treasure!!

    • @nativevirginian8344
      @nativevirginian8344 2 года назад +1

      I am so proud to have quilts that two of my great-grandmothers sewed. And I have my grandmothers’ aprons, one everyday, one good one for family dinners, and a Christmas one sewed by one grandmother. Means so much!

  • @alicewall5363
    @alicewall5363 3 года назад +17

    Wearing an apron indoors when I work on a painting AND taking the time to put on grubby gardening clothes before I work outside are so important. Especially having a pair of gardening boots! I learned this the hard way.

    • @avanellehansen4525
      @avanellehansen4525 2 года назад +1

      I scratch my nails on bar soap before gardening. Makes for easy clean up

  • @jeanniecollier6763
    @jeanniecollier6763 3 года назад +104

    Use chalk to get out grease. Chalk the area of the grease inside and outside of the garment, Let it sit for 30 minutes then chalk more inside and outside, let it sit for 2 hours. Next put (BLUE) Dawn dishwashing liquid on the stain and scrub the Fabric together at the stain. Place in a warm wash setting and air dry . If the stain did not come out completely, repeat the process. I have never had anything not come out by the 2nd try.

    • @holly5791
      @holly5791 3 года назад +14

      Sprinkle corn starch or baby powder on a grease stain overnight. Wash as usual. It works.

    • @factsoverfiction7826
      @factsoverfiction7826 3 года назад +3

      Good to know!

    • @jolenethiessen357
      @jolenethiessen357 2 года назад +3

      I find just wetting it and going at it with a bar of Sunlight laundry soap does the trick. Occasionally it needs 2 treatments. I learned that trying to get lipstick stains out of purificators for church - between the dye and the fats in the lipstick it was tough to get it out of the white linen. But the Sunlight took it right out. Now I use it for all my stains, but especially grease.

    • @brandyhoward6136
      @brandyhoward6136 2 года назад +1

      You can apply dawn dishwashing liquid, Dr. Brother's or Murphy's oil soap without the chalk. Works just fine. 🤷🏾‍♀️

  • @evelynsaungikar3553
    @evelynsaungikar3553 3 года назад +132

    My son was 10 when he found out that you can buy shorts, they don’t have to come from old long pants cut off and hemmed!

    • @ladywytch129
      @ladywytch129 3 года назад +1

      Lol. My sons still prefer the cutoffs 😂

    • @ludicrousone8706
      @ludicrousone8706 3 года назад +2

      Why would you hem them?

    • @annarodriguez9868
      @annarodriguez9868 3 года назад +8

      @@ludicrousone8706 Hemmed shorts could be worn to school or out in public. Raggedy cut off hems might be ok for the backyard never in public!

    • @evelynsaungikar3553
      @evelynsaungikar3553 3 года назад +3

      @@ludicrousone8706 They weren’t jeans, but active wear pants. I thought without hemming the knitted fabric might ladder or unravel.

    • @ludicrousone8706
      @ludicrousone8706 3 года назад +1

      @@annarodriguez9868 This makes me feel like a terrible Mum 😌😌

  • @willothewispl
    @willothewispl 3 года назад +7

    I am 69 and do a lot of these things. My mom was a waitress and my dad was a steelworker. There were five of us kids. Learned from my mom. Always wear an apron. And yes call it tin foil and reuse it as much as I can. Do you remember wrapping the kitchen trash in newspaper and then putting it in paper grocery bags in the trash can. Was telling my 34,year old son that the other. He did not believe me. I still wash plastic baggies and other plastic bags out and reuse for things. Nothing goes to waste in our home. 👍🏻😁

  • @katherinerichardson1767
    @katherinerichardson1767 3 года назад +128

    "THE APRON" is a must at my house! Never fails that something will escape and try to get on my clothes. By the way IF you do get something spattered on your clothes, try using blue dawn dish washing liquid. It does miracles on grease stains!!!

    • @donnawilkerson7038
      @donnawilkerson7038 3 года назад +4

      Any patterns out there for reusing old men's dress shirts to create an apron, I saw some in a shop, but thought if I had a pattern I could do that myself.

    • @chedderbug2820
      @chedderbug2820 3 года назад +4

      @@donnawilkerson7038 google it or search for it on RUclips. I'm certain someone out there has made a video for it. These days there is a video for just about anything you need or can think of. 😃

    • @sherlynpatterson4304
      @sherlynpatterson4304 3 года назад +3

      @@donnawilkerson7038 Make the shirt into a vest buy cutting out the sleeves. Use the sleeves for pockets. Any material leftover make into rags.

    • @cyndirienstra945
      @cyndirienstra945 3 года назад +7

      Thank you so much for the Dawn dish soap trick. My husband and I both got axle grease on our good jeans hooking up his trailer and i squited Dawn on the spots and let them sit overnight. Washed them the next day and absolutely grease freeeeee woo hoo! 🥳

    • @amyhellerford9422
      @amyhellerford9422 2 года назад +2

      DAWN also works on really greasy hair lol !

  • @prayersquad3391
    @prayersquad3391 3 года назад +42

    My dad screwed the lids of the glass jar on the top of the wooden shelf. He would screw it in and it would hold for a long time. Daddy loved it when there were babies in the family because of the little Gerber jars. He also used tin coffee cans. His workshop was immaculate. He and mother grew up in the Great Depression.

    • @GalCharlotte
      @GalCharlotte 3 года назад +1

      My grandfather did the same thing.

    • @marynewman2457
      @marynewman2457 3 года назад +1

      My Dad does the same thing! He loved the baby food jars!

    • @LisjeVal
      @LisjeVal 3 года назад +1

      Does anyone have a source for baby food jars? I'll soon be buying my 1st home and babies are LONG out of the picture for me, but I would like that in our eventual shed, since I also learned that as a child.

    • @bonniematthews1080
      @bonniematthews1080 2 года назад

      Yup, My dad had lots of glass jars with the tops screwed into the bottom of the shelves in his work shop. He got such a feeling of pride when he could find whatever screw he needed with a quick glance at that “ army” of jars. Boy life was filled with simple pleasures then.

  • @crusadercat7158
    @crusadercat7158 6 месяцев назад +2

    “Watch the pennies and the dollars will take care of themselves.” - Benjamin Franklin 💕👛

  • @veronicaboydwash3265
    @veronicaboydwash3265 3 года назад +8

    Iam 63,I grew up with some of these tips,you better eat what's on your plate,or you had to stay at the table until gone.some people did call aluminum foil,tin foil.but people kids were more appreciative and respect ful than now.

  • @1992DJP
    @1992DJP 3 года назад +17

    It was made out of tin when it first was manufactured. Aluminum foil came on the scene in the mid to late 1920s. I’m in my late 60s my friends and family grew up calling it tin foil

  • @DafyddMorse
    @DafyddMorse 2 года назад +5

    Maintaining things is so important! I could have saved so much money if I washed and oiled my bike more often 🤦‍♂️.
    Also, the towel thing. I use my towel for a week and when I told my classroom full of kids that, they were appalled 😮. 30 students all claimed they used a clean towel every day. I was shocked!

  • @jeannie4489
    @jeannie4489 3 года назад +60

    My family was old Boston Irish. Not sure if that is the reason, but they all called aluminum foil 'silver paper'. (Silvah papah) lol

  • @georgiawilksch5708
    @georgiawilksch5708 3 года назад +54

    We haven’t had a dryer in years, and we only occasionally used it. Line drying always. And yes, line dried sheets smell so good.

    • @lovinitall6639
      @lovinitall6639 3 года назад +3

      But line dried jeans in the winter UGH

    • @georgiawilksch5708
      @georgiawilksch5708 3 года назад +8

      @@lovinitall6639 yeah, our house in winter can get a little crowded with clothes racks

    • @dbartz5510
      @dbartz5510 3 года назад

      Can't do this, allergies.😭

    • @amyhellerford9422
      @amyhellerford9422 2 года назад

      @@dbartz5510 same.....

    • @JohnnyUmphress
      @JohnnyUmphress 2 года назад +4

      Same here. Grew up without a dryer and at 69 I still don't have one. I don't like the way the clothes smell out of a dryer. And they ruin the clothes and shorten their life. Air dried clothes last much longer.
      Dryers eat up a LOT of electricity. Same with dish washers. Don't have one, don't want one.

  • @amandateague5146
    @amandateague5146 3 года назад +13

    We learned how to sew as teenagers. It’s a great skill. I mend and I have never had a button come off that I sewed on. I use old toothbrushes to clean too. We had to line dry the laundry unless it was raining. We always had yard sales. As punishment our mom would take us to yard sales, humiliating as a young person. We had gardens too. It was good to be “poor” since you learned the value of money.

  • @almontepaolilli7531
    @almontepaolilli7531 3 года назад +4

    I am 76 and I was raised by depression era parents. Frugality has always been helpful

  • @deborahhuffman3231
    @deborahhuffman3231 3 года назад +16

    So true my grandma washed all windows on her house with news papers. Hung all laundry always on clothes lines. Aways grew a garden every yr ate from it all summer and fall and in winter with what was canned or frozen. Meal planned out followed grocery lists didnt run to the store all the time. Aprons allways for clothes saftey and big pockets works great for clothes pins. Home made oatmeal and homemade kettle made popcorn for snacks. Nothing instant. Always real potatoes peeling away. It amazes me no one has time enough in our time today and everthing is prepackaged and instant and microwavable. Makes you think. Love your videos.

  • @bythepiece
    @bythepiece 5 месяцев назад +1

    My Mom was born in 1922 and I could not leavethe table until the plate was empty. I might wait an hour and finally ate the green peas. I bought break nout in goosebumps. Once I was an adult - no peas and sometimes I don't clean my plate. You are reminding me off the olden days. Allmy life my New Years Resolution IS USE IT UP, WEAR IT OUT, MAKE IT DO OR DO WITHOUT.

  • @chikasuemi
    @chikasuemi 3 года назад +20

    This is hilarious. This is my life and I'm only in my 30s. :P My hot tips that I learned from my great aunt (also from the depression era) is to hand wash your dishes and air dry them. She would then use the water from the dishes to water her plants. Also, wash your plastic wraps/cling film and reuse them. There are more tips from her and she really was amazing. I miss her so much.

    • @amyhellerford9422
      @amyhellerford9422 2 года назад +1

      My girls still handwash ( me too ) dishes. They moaned at first, but that's what made me STICK to that lol ! I grew up washing dishes... NO dishwasher ! Sometimes I think a few generations have gotten too spoiled !

  • @gratituderanch9406
    @gratituderanch9406 3 года назад +38

    I make fire starters from dryer lint, old candle stubs and condiment cups or egg cartons.
    I make broth from old bones (we freeze the bones from chicken after we eat the drums/thighs/carcass) and another bag we freeze butts of onions, garlic, carrots, celery etcs. Thus we turn trash into broth. And we do have an instant pot so we can make broth super easy.

    • @lynhanna917
      @lynhanna917 3 года назад +2

      love the instant pot - I make rice pudding in mine - so much easier and you only have one pot to clean

    • @Marie-D.
      @Marie-D. 3 года назад +1

      @@lynhanna917 I also make rice pudding in mine and it's so good and easy! Love the instant pot.

    • @johnniehallford1641
      @johnniehallford1641 2 года назад +3

      I do the same, especially after baking a whole chicken. We eat the parts of the chicken we prefer then I pull the rest off the bone and dice for other dishes. I do the same when I buy the cut-up parts to cook. I cook the parts we like, bag the others, and then later, when I have a pan full, I simmer till done, take all the meat for other uses, and save the broth. Multiple uses from one bird.

  • @barbaratolker4366
    @barbaratolker4366 Год назад +1

    Tin foil for sure! My depression-era parents bought quality over quantity. They didn't have a lot of things but they took care of them. Mom used green stamps, never wasted food, shopped sales, etc. Sundays were leftover days. She taught me how to sew. Grateful for their example.

  • @Happy_life117
    @Happy_life117 3 года назад +9

    Made napkins and paper towels from old flannel bed sheets...good for the environment and the pocketbook.

  • @rachellechuga778
    @rachellechuga778 3 года назад +34

    I wear an apron daily. Put it on in the morning and leave it on all day. Ive been known to walk in the grocery store with it 🤷🏻‍♀️. I just pull it off and stuffed it in my bag. 😆

    • @cathymillar9900
      @cathymillar9900 3 года назад +3

      I use an old shirt of my husbands and it makes a wonderful apron. Keeping your clothes stain free helps the longevity of clothes, and sometimes permits you to wear the item a second day. Win on water, detergent and wear and tear.

    • @zezmereldazezmerelda4653
      @zezmereldazezmerelda4653 3 года назад

      hahahaha!

  • @gabrielpaulsmom
    @gabrielpaulsmom 3 года назад +71

    When we bought our house in 93 it had the original caloric wall oven. That oven lasted 50 years, we are currently on our 3rd replacement. They do not make them like they use to.

    • @yellowsky.000
      @yellowsky.000 3 года назад +6

      Yes! My Frigidaire oven has been kickin' since 1956. It's such a shame that things aren't made as well now.

    • @martiejohnson9376
      @martiejohnson9376 3 года назад +3

      I hate to tell you this, but nothing is made to last like it use to any more.

    • @cillaloves2fish688
      @cillaloves2fish688 2 года назад +2

      Our Frigidaire oven with pullout stove (like a drawer) finally gave out about 3 months ago... It was 58 years old, same age as the house.
      The new stove's oven doesn't even work!

    • @diannamc367
      @diannamc367 2 года назад +1

      This is literally on purpose!
      Some people don't mind since they feel that they always need to have the "latest and greatest" but, for frugal people it really sucks. You are so much better off finding an older version of a product that someone else felt the need to upgrade!

    • @tenabarnes3269
      @tenabarnes3269 2 года назад +2

      We had a Coleman heating and air system that was installed in our home in 1983 , we just replaced it in 2019, the new system doesn't cool or heat the home as well, and the power bill is higher since we first used the new unit.

  • @cltinturkey
    @cltinturkey 2 года назад +1

    We say tinfoil in Virginia. My family also served one meal, period. I'm from a big family and remember a meal where my sister was negotiating strawberry vs. grape jam with my 3-year old nephew where we were racing to head out to church. I ended up riding with my parents and told my Dad "You know, I didn't have any choices until I went off to college". He replied "And it didn't hurt you at all". My parents put six of us through college. We all got scholarships, summer jobs, and part-time jobs to help, and it didn't hurt at all!

  • @poodlegirl55
    @poodlegirl55 3 года назад +61

    Great tips. I just put a baking sheet on casseroles if I need a cover, I haven't bought tin foil in 20 years. I save the wax bags in cereal, cut open and wash. It is much better quality than roll wax paper. I use glass jars to store leftover paint, it seals better and you can still use it for touch ups years later. Best to use a jar that fits the paint so no air in it. It helps you maintain your home better if you store them in the room you painted and keep up with touch ups. I got a pkg of artist brushes at Dollar tree and I keep one rubber banded to the jar.

    • @kich6172
      @kich6172 3 года назад +5

      Never thought about reusing wax cereal bags instead of rolled wax paper. Thanks for this!

    • @poodlegirl55
      @poodlegirl55 3 года назад +1

      @@kich6172 it is so much thicker! I also use it in my craft room for different things.

    • @markhedger6378
      @markhedger6378 3 года назад +1

      Great tip !Thanks for that

    • @lynhanna917
      @lynhanna917 2 года назад +4

      if you are having to take baking to someone's house cut a flap on the empty cereal box (the long flat side) line it with the empty cereal bag with a matching flap) you now have a great covered tray and you don't need to worry about breaking a glass container or having to leave a tupperware container behind.

  • @janders1432
    @janders1432 3 года назад +18

    Good tips - Dawn dishwashing liquid removes grease stains from most clothes. Just dab a little Dawn straight onto the grease blob and wash it as you normally would. I’ve saved many shirts that way (I don’t own an apron).

  • @jimmiepatrum
    @jimmiepatrum 3 года назад +11

    I identified with every single one of your 20 frugal living habits. It made me remember that both my grandmother and my mother in law always turned their plastic bread bags inside out and washed them in the washing machine, then hung then on the line to dry. It was a badge of honor to have used bread bags where all the writing had been washed so much it was gone. My husband never liked that I darned his socks, but I did it anyway. When our first child was born, I used to take my husband's worn out underwear, cut off the elastic and use that to repair our son's pajamas. I even used it to repair my bras. Right now my mattress cover has a big quilted patch on it, because I cannot bear to buy a new cover. Heck, I may even patch the patch if I want to! I used to tell my children, "Pennies make nickels, make dimes, make quarters, make dollars." I never fail to pick up a coin if I find one. I've always called it tinfoil...that is one word to me, not two. My mom used lipstick as rouge; it worked for her. I could go on and on, but that's enough for now. Thanks for the warm memories in your post. Diane in NC

  • @stelladooro4505
    @stelladooro4505 2 года назад +1

    We both had older parents who married during the depression so we grew up doing all these things. We had our kids a little later, too, and their friends (and now spouses) didn't grow up saving the soap slivers to make a new bar, used the empty cottage cheese container instead of buying plastic storage containers. Our ancestors, grandparents and parents were the original recyclers. Bad times don't last, but that has to be then, that good times don't last, either. I hope the following generations can handle the bad times.

  • @valerieberry6174
    @valerieberry6174 3 года назад +4

    I saw my mom used Christmas wrapping paper a second time. My mom asked me often ,you spent a dollar on your lunch. Mom put small pieces of soap in coat pockets to keep moths out of closets.

  • @lizamcraebishop9176
    @lizamcraebishop9176 3 года назад +9

    I totally feel this. My mom was born in 1929 and my dad in 1925. I am the youngest of nine kids. My mom had me when she was 44. One other frugal thing we did was home canning. Myself and all but one sister still do this today. I have taught my sons and they know how to can safely. Thanks for the video.

  • @chococat178
    @chococat178 3 года назад +82

    New Subscriber! LOVE these tips. I do some of these, like the Piggy Bank and re-using towels. I am teaching myself how to mend and sew now. I do not consider these to be frugal, I call it "the smarter and less wasteful" way of living ;)

    • @sherlynpatterson4304
      @sherlynpatterson4304 3 года назад +12

      Another saving tip is if you use paper towels just to dry a wet counter from a water spill. You can let the towel dry out and reuse for cleaning up pet messes, etc.

    • @sherrywiley4817
      @sherrywiley4817 3 года назад +2

      @@sherlynpatterson4304 I do that too!

    • @martiejohnson9376
      @martiejohnson9376 3 года назад +5

      I crochet and I have made a few scarves and keep them for gifts, I also have started making little baby blankets cause it seems that when you need a gift you are usually short of money at that time too. So if you buy your yarn when it is on sale you would have already have a gift made with Love.

    • @sherlynpatterson4304
      @sherlynpatterson4304 3 года назад +3

      @@martiejohnson9376Your family and friends are lucky to have those gifts. I miss all the crochet, knitted and needle art things from my family. I'm a terrible crocheter. I used to knit and do embroidery and some tatting. My grandma also taught me how to do eyelet work and something where you pull out threads to make a a nice weaving pattern from basic cloth and the other stitches you see in the antique samplers. My aunt taught me needlepoint methods.It's been over fifty years since I've done all those sewing type projects and more. A friend found a quilted pillow project for me with a traditional Hawaiian pineapple pattern. It will compliment the crochet bed cover from a different friend. Really treasure those two house warming gifts. Planning to do some pretty quilting and embroidery work on the pillow casing in the near future.

    • @helenapereira8547
      @helenapereira8547 3 года назад +4

      As a young girl, I used to wear clothes that belonged to my cousines and at the age of 17, I Iearned from magazine Burda how to make my own clothes

  • @jomurphey
    @jomurphey 2 года назад +1

    My grandmother was born in 1897 and died in 1993. She had 12 children. She was an expert at frugal living.

  • @nancymelis2824
    @nancymelis2824 3 года назад +11

    I grew up in the 1950s and was youngest of 4 kids and we reused paper cups for days!

  • @SBL1932
    @SBL1932 3 года назад +15

    I still use a lot of these. I also save change and the money in my wallet at the end of the month. This is enough to spend for all my Christmas gifts.

  • @stephanieporter6836
    @stephanieporter6836 3 года назад +12

    This video was so fun! I was taught all of these tips growing up and still use them to this day. Also, you wore hand-me-downs (clothes and shoes from your older siblings or neighbors). In addition to turning off the lights we were constantly told to shut the doors because "we're not cooling or heating the neighborhood".

  • @lettyzane2720
    @lettyzane2720 3 года назад +36

    I recently fixed my paper shredded.I haven’t felt so proud of myself in a long time. Thanks for the reminders

    • @lynhanna917
      @lynhanna917 2 года назад +1

      I live you tube. The windshield washer pump quit on my car, with you tube, a $10 new pump and 1/2 hr of my time it now works and I figure I saved $300 (that's what I would have been charged to get it fixed).

  • @lynnfendlason4277
    @lynnfendlason4277 3 года назад +5

    Things I've used for gift giving: Wrapping with newspaper, wrapping with cut-open old mylar balloons, cereal boxes, scraps of fabric. For decorating: used white-out correction tape pulled from the dispenser makes free curly ribbon, decorating with old feather boas, pieces of ribbon from old outfits, making "rubber" bows from leftover unused party balloons, homemade poms from leftover crochet thread, etc.

  • @airforcemom2235
    @airforcemom2235 3 года назад +16

    Thanks for the memory of line dried sheets! It's the late 1960's and I can see in my mind's eye my mother's clothes line and our sheets hanging in the warm summer sun. That smell can't be replicated any other way. Wonderful.

    • @lynhanna917
      @lynhanna917 3 года назад +7

      I haven't used a dryer in 20 years. I pulled out sheets that I had line dried back in September and they still had that fresh line dried smell. Made me smile as the snow was falling today.

    • @victorialove9104
      @victorialove9104 3 года назад +2

      My mom either hang dried the laundry in the sun or put the laundry on dryer racks indoors if it was raining. She left me the home I grew up in when she died. I intended buying a dryer but living in the home awhile and using mom's system I find I really don't need a dryer. Hanging the clothes on the line in the sun is an enjoyable meditative experience for me and the clothes smell lovely when dried.

  • @FlaKNMB
    @FlaKNMB 3 года назад +11

    My father was born in 1927, my mom in 1931. I was born in 1957, and you pretty much described my life. Along with, "Turn off the lights." was "Shut the door." My parents, older brother and I lived in a 900 sq. ft. 2/1 house until I was in the third grade. I don't think we had coupons until the '70s or '80s but there were Green Stamps. My grandmother washed baggies along with her tinfoil.

    • @angelakeesee7094
      @angelakeesee7094 3 года назад +7

      'were you raised in a barn' was also a familiar saying

    • @FlaKNMB
      @FlaKNMB 3 года назад +1

      @@angelakeesee7094 I was born and grew up in Miami, so we didn't hear that one too much.

    • @99zanne
      @99zanne 3 года назад +2

      My mom used Green Stamps my whole life, and I’m old enough that my first set of everyday flatware I purchased with them, too. I had to get a second set to fill in after 30 years of use, but it’s still in daily use 10 additional years later.

    • @cherylT321
      @cherylT321 3 года назад +1

      Oooh, l remember the green stamps! I can’t remember what my mum did with them, though!

    • @FrugalOverFifty
      @FrugalOverFifty 3 года назад +2

      I remember Green Stamps!!! I got the iron that I took to college from the Green Stamp store. It was such a wondrous place!

  • @tracydimond3759
    @tracydimond3759 3 года назад +1

    My grandma kept mason jars with buttons, she had patterns for making clothes, elastic, zippers, etc. She kept bolts of cloth, too. They had a garden and grandma made everything from scratch. I loved her hoosier cabinet in the kitchen with it's flour bin, cutting board, etc. She taught me to crochet and if she needed to keep a grandkid busy she'd hand us a jar of buttons and ask us to count them. Lol
    I kept glass jars, I save vinegar jugs, I stretch my fabric softener by mixing water, vinegar and a cheap fabric softener I like. I use ziploc baggies over rinsing and drying them between use. I use a powdered detergent from the dollar tree mixing it with grated zote soap, grated Fels naptha, and oxi-all from the dollar tree, and thier color safe bleach. I use no more than a quarter of a cup per load in my top loader he washer. I buy handi-wipes from dollar tree and pour some of my fab softener in a container then cut about half the handi-wipes and soak them to make re-usable fab softener sheets. That has lasted over 1 yr.
    I saw a video on RUclips showing how to remove the lid on a jug for a wetjet. So now I just use a 50/50 mix of fabulosa and water. Replace the lid and use normally. I bought a "shammies" at dollar tree, cut it to the wetjet pad size and have reusable pads that I wash and air- dry flat.
    I take the slivers of hand soap and grate them put it in a pump bottle or squeeze bottle with warm water and have liquid hand soap.

  • @melaniem1028
    @melaniem1028 3 года назад +58

    My dad used newspaper in the garden to keep the weeds down.

    • @lorrainehozian8608
      @lorrainehozian8608 3 года назад +2

      Did that all the time

    • @trishchaney7212
      @trishchaney7212 3 года назад +2

      Me too!

    • @shadytreez
      @shadytreez 3 года назад +4

      I use cardboard...these days...

    • @wwashington270
      @wwashington270 3 года назад +1

      Amazing how is it done I need to kill weeds in a flower bed

    • @sharonh.harris1924
      @sharonh.harris1924 3 года назад +2

      Heck, my Grandmother used newspaper to cover us when we took a nap on the couch!!! I remember putting taps on the heels of our shoes to make them last longer. I was envious of those who had leather loafers with pennies in them because... what a waste of money! LOL!!! I still can't stand to go into one of those kitchy bars or restaurants with money taped on the walls. That definitely offends my sensibilities. I knew kids who put cardboard in their shoes because the soles had holes. Most of us couldn't afford braces so you often saw crooked smiles, rotted teeth, missing teeth.

  • @margaretward7682
    @margaretward7682 3 года назад +25

    Yes... tin foil! That’s what I was brought up calling it. We ate what was cooked (from scratch) no one got a special meal. I also have great memories of freshly cleaned line dried sheets on a summer day, I wish I could line dry where I live now. This was a nice trip down memory lane, simpler times. Thanks

    • @amyhellerford9422
      @amyhellerford9422 2 года назад

      Sadly, I have to compromise on the separate meals, at least for now. I have a daughter with food allergies... ughhhh

  • @lorisimon2338
    @lorisimon2338 3 года назад +4

    I'm 64 (born in '56) and I remember tin foil and mom always line dried in the summer cause I would help. Our church leader used to re-use tea bags! Mom was born in the depression and always stocked up on food that was on sale. I used to take pix of her cupboards in my older years to remember how much food she collected!

  • @MsDoglover02
    @MsDoglover02 5 месяцев назад +1

    My sister encouraged me to wear her apron earlier this year when I was visiting and cooking at her house. I love it! She passed away in August and I was able to bring home an older apron she won in 2010 that I wore tonight during a cook-a-thon. I tend to get hotter but stayed clean!

    • @THEJENNIFERCOOK
      @THEJENNIFERCOOK  5 месяцев назад

      I am so sorry for your loss. I am so glad you have her apron to remember her every time you wear it. Hugs 🤗

  • @DJ-uw9uq
    @DJ-uw9uq 3 года назад +1

    I don't know how I survived without you tubes help prior to 2005. I had a 2 year old and 5 year old and no mom. Their dad left 2007. You Tube saved me with how to do stuff.