6 benefits of hiring a professional window cleaner

6 benefits of hiring a professional window cleaner

Window cleaning tends to be one of those jobs that get overlooked – especially when it comes to the top floors that are difficult for you to reach from the outside without a ladder. Should you hire a professional window cleaner? Having somebody come and clean your windows on a regular basis can make a huge difference to your home. If you’re tired of looking out of dirty windows and feel that it’s bringing your home down, a good window cleaner could be just the professional that you need. Here are some benefits of investing in a professional window cleaning service.

Woman cleaning window

It’s affordable

Most window cleaners don’t charge a huge amount for their services; therefore, they’re affordable to the majority of both home-owners and tenants. Most of the time, you’ll only need your window cleaner to visit around once or twice a month depending on the area in which you live and the amount of debris that tends to collect on your windows.

Someone cleaning a window with blue frames

It’s safer

Hiring a professional window cleaner is always a much safer option than trying to clean the windows yourself, particularly on the upper levels of your home. Using a ladder to try and clean your own windows can be dangerous if you don’t have the correct training or safety equipment, so it’s worth getting somebody who does. CCS Services offers professional, reliable window cleaning Cardiff and come with all the equipment necessary to do a great job. This window cleaning services is affordable, reputable and they offer a range of further services that you might like for your home, such as gutter cleaning.

Man wearing orange gloves and cleaning a windowcredit

Improve your windows’ condition

If you have double or triple glazing, regular cleaning can help to prolong the life of your windows and prevent debris from becoming trapped inside. Windows can be expensive to replace, and a good window cleaner will also be able to spot any potential problems while they’re cleaning the window that you might not have noticed from inside the house, giving you a better chance at getting repairs done before they become bigger and more costly.

Cleaning a window with a squeegie

Improve your home

You might be surprised at just how much of a difference clean and sparkling windows can make to your home. If you’re always cleaning and tidying to keep your home looking great, grubby, dirty windows can bring the whole house down.

Dog on a bed in front of a bay window

More natural light

Having clean and shiny windows makes it easier for you to let more natural light into your home, which can have its own set of benefits on your mood, wellbeing and health. When your windows are dirty, they might not do as good of a job as letting natural light in – or you might be tempted to keep the blinds shut or the curtains closed more often so that you don’t have to look at the marks.

Woman gazing out of an open window

Improve your mood

Living in a clean and tidy home can do wonders for your mood and having clean windows is no different. It’s a very small thing, but it can have a huge impact when you’re able to look outside of a clean and sparkling window with no annoying marks that you struggle to reach to clean on your own.

Professional window cleaning services are well worth the investment, with more benefits than you might imagine.

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Why you should prioritise cleaning your carpets

Why you should prioritise cleaning your carpets | H is for Home

Carpets are the cosmetic polish of a home; adding a splash of colour, elegance, a touch of texturing and cosiness to any room. Carpets not only look good, adding visual warmth, sometimes they can help your central heating in winter, providing a barrier between the warmed air and a heat-absorbing concrete or hard wooden floor.

Carpets tend to run from wall to wall and are often fixed into place by carpet layers who carefully cut the carpet to precisely fit your home. However, rugs – large squares of carpeting, neatly bound and finished at the edges – can also give your home the benefits of a carpeted floor without the expense, and leaving access to some areas of flooring – more about which below. Whether you have rugs or carpets, there are some issues that can arise with carpeting. Let’s take a closer look at these.

Cleaning your carpets is a specialist skill. Using the wrong products, even in a high-end carpet cleaner, can result in your carpet being permanently stained or faded with unsightly blotches.

Carpets can age badly. Choosing a lovely pale carpet may seem sensible when you’re young and enthusiastic during a beautifully dry summer, but given a rainy year, and the addition of a puppy or a baby: suddenly, that wonderful pastel shade begins to lose its attractiveness!

Carpeting a whole room can result in uneven wear, with the areas with highest footfall showing loose or worn threads, while those areas underneath sofas and chairs remain pristine (even if they get a little dusty!)

The ideal is, of course, to have a carpet that’s soft and springy underfoot, while retaining its original colour, and remaining sturdy and durable for years. How can this be achieved?

Choose carefully in the beginning. Decide if you’re buying a carpet or rug to last a year or two, before you move from rented digs into your own place; or if this carpet is going directly into the home where you plan to stay for decades, if not, for life. Invest as much as you can in your carpet – indeed, in all your furnishings and fittings – if the latter is the case. Buying a sturdy, dirt-and-wear resistant carpet is an excellent investment, and will set your home up to look great for years to come. This is where rugs may be a better option. If you can plan to leave high traffic areas – access to other rooms, entryways and so on – uncarpeted, they are easier to keep clean and tidy.

Keep the carpet clean by ensuring that people wipe their feet thoroughly before walking on it, or have them remove their shoes entirely – nothing is more homely feeling than (clean) bare feet on a soft clean carpet! Vacuum the carpet at least once a week, more frequently if you have pets, lots of young children or live in an area that attracts a lot of dust, pollen and wind-borne detritus.

Once a year or so, have your carpet professionally cleaned – a quick Google search of your location, for example, carpet cleaning in Glasgow, will throw up a directory of skilled operatives such as this cleaning company. A professional carpet cleaner can remove depths of dirt and residue that your domestic vacuum cannot touch, plus they can wash heavily soiled areas, then removing most of the water with an efficiency that householders would struggle to match.

There are commercial treatments available that you can apply to your carpet after it’s been professionally cleaned to keep that freshly-cleaned, crisp appearance for longer. Carpet cleaning, once mastered, need not be either expensive or time-consuming in the long run. Speak to your carpet cleaning professional for more hints and advice on how to keep your carpet in great condition for longer.

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The most common areas of the house that get dirty and how to keep them looking new

The most common areas of the house that get dirty and how to keep them looking new | H is for Home

The build-up of dirt, dust and grime is unavoidable, and something with which home-owners must do constant battle. Some areas of the house tend to require more regular attention than others, however, and it’s worth looking at ways to clean them more quickly and efficiently (and therefore more regularly).

White bathtub with stainless steel taps and white towel thrown over

Bathroom

Perhaps the second most important room in the house when it comes to cleaning is the bathroom. These are places where we clean ourselves, and thus they’ll need to soak up a great deal of dirt. This will quickly ruin the look of the room. There’s no point investing in quality bathroom tiles if your beautiful tiles and tile patterns are going to have filthy grouting between them. Particularly vulnerable is the grouting around the shower area, which can be dealt with using a vinegar solution. Chrome fittings tend to show up more dirt than stainless steel ones, and thus they’ll require more regular attention.

Kitchen with wooden worktops and white tiling

Kitchen

Any area where food is prepared is vulnerable to dirt. Surfaces used to chop vegetables, slice bread and butterfly chicken breasts are likely to pick up a surface of dirt over time. More troublingly, whenever anything is cooked, tiny food particulates will float through the air and settle onto any available surface, and thus just about everywhere is vulnerable. Wipe down every surface regularly, and have a bottle of spray cleaner to hand for surfaces. Ovens may require an occasional deep-clean to keep them in good condition. Taps, being as they’re handled regularly (and often by grubby fingers) will act as a magnet for grime, and so should be treated to a scrub every now and again.

Bedside with white linen

Bedroom

If you’re like most people, you’ll be sleeping on your bedding for eight hours a night, and shedding thousands of skin cells in the process. Changing the sheets & pillowcases every week should therefore be considered mandatory. The same is true of carpets, which should be vacuumed regularly, and occasionally treated to a deeper steam-clean.

Windows

Windows attract dirt, much like any other surface. The difference is that it shows up more here, as it’ll restrict the amount of light that gets into the interior. You might scrub windows with a vinegar solution and some scrunched-up newspaper; it’s abrasive enough to clear surface imperfections without damaging the underlying glass.

Man holding a mobile phone

Personal items

There are some items that you’ll be touching almost constantly. Of these, the most obvious is probably your phone. You’ll be rubbing your thumb across the screen’s surface several hundred times every day, and leaving greasy prints as you do so. You can’t do much about that, but you can remove the dirt and grime that might have accumulated on the device with the help of a quick wipe with a clean cloth. The same applies to keyboards, handbags, wallets and every other item that’s regularly picked up and put down.

Price Points: Hand-held vacuum cleaners

Hand-held vacuum cleaners | H is for Home

As we may have mentioned in the past, we have no stairs leading to the upper level of our cottage. The original ladders to the crog loft bedrooms are still intact and we’re loathe to replace them with new stairs. Hauling our Harry vacuum cleaner up and down the ladders is awkward, if not slightly unsafe. A cordless hand-held vacuum cleaner is the obvious solution.

When it comes to choosing hand-held vacuum cleaners there are a few points that you need to take into consideration; how much dust/fur/crumbs etc that it can hold, How much the tool weighs, how long it takes to charge and how long it can run on a single charge before it runs out of juice.

Each of the following models has elements that make them better than the next. The cheapest has the largest bin capacity, but it takes 4 hours to charge and be ready to use. The most expensive has a run time that’s three times longer than its nearest rival – but it’s also twice the price of the next cheapest. The mid-range example is the most lightweight, however it only holds a quarter of a litre of dust. Decisions, decisions… which would you choose? Or do you own one of them? Let us know!

  1. Black + Decker Dustbuster Flexi PD1020LP-GB handheld vacuum cleaner: £79.99, Currys
  • Bin capacity: 0.5L
  • Charge time: 4 hours
  • Run-time per charge: 10 minutes
  • Weight: 1.3kg
  1. Shark cordless handheld vacuum cleaner (single battery) WV200UK: £99.99, Shark
  • Bin capacity: 0.25L
  • Charge time: 2.5 hours
  • Run-time per charge: 8 minutes
  • Weight: 0.6kg
  1. Dyson V7 trigger handheld vacuum cleaner: £199.00, John Lewis
  • Bin capacity: 0.4L
  • Charge time: 3.5 hours
  • Run-time per charge: 30 minutes
  • Weight: 1.38kg

shop hand-held vacuum cleaners

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Prices & links correct at time of publication.

Dyson V7 trigger handheld vacuum cleaner
Dyson V7 trigger handheld vacuum cleaner
£199.00
Shark cordless handheld vacuum cleaner (single battery) WV200UK
Shark cordless handheld vacuum cleaner (single battery) WV200UK
£99.99
Black + Decker Dustbuster Flexi PD1020LP-GB handheld vacuum cleaner
Black + Decker Dustbuster Flexi PD1020LP-GB handheld vacuum cleaner
£79.99
Dyson V7 trigger handheld vacuum cleaner
Dyson V7 trigger handheld vacuum cleaner
£199.00
Shark cordless handheld vacuum cleaner (single battery) WV200UK
Shark cordless handheld vacuum cleaner (single battery) WV200UK
£99.99
Black + Decker Dustbuster Flexi PD1020LP-GB handheld vacuum cleaner
Black + Decker Dustbuster Flexi PD1020LP-GB handheld vacuum cleaner
£79.99
Dyson V7 trigger handheld vacuum cleaner
Dyson V7 trigger handheld vacuum cleaner
£199.00
Shark cordless handheld vacuum cleaner (single battery) WV200UK
Shark cordless handheld vacuum cleaner (single battery) WV200UK
£99.99
Black + Decker Dustbuster Flexi PD1020LP-GB handheld vacuum cleaner
Black + Decker Dustbuster Flexi PD1020LP-GB handheld vacuum cleaner
£79.99
Dyson V7 trigger handheld vacuum cleaner
Dyson V7 trigger handheld vacuum cleaner
£199.00
Shark cordless handheld vacuum cleaner (single battery) WV200UK
Shark cordless handheld vacuum cleaner (single battery) WV200UK
£99.99
Black + Decker Dustbuster Flexi PD1020LP-GB handheld vacuum cleaner
Black + Decker Dustbuster Flexi PD1020LP-GB handheld vacuum cleaner
£79.99
Dyson V7 trigger handheld vacuum cleaner
Dyson V7 trigger handheld vacuum cleaner
£199.00
Shark cordless handheld vacuum cleaner (single battery) WV200UK
Shark cordless handheld vacuum cleaner (single battery) WV200UK
£99.99
Black + Decker Dustbuster Flexi PD1020LP-GB handheld vacuum cleaner
Black + Decker Dustbuster Flexi PD1020LP-GB handheld vacuum cleaner
£79.99