10 Frugal Living Tips Your Grandma Used (Old Fashioned Frugal Tips)

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In this video, we reveal 10 Frugal Living Tips Your Grandma Used and some of the most effective old fashioned frugal tips. If you are looking for frugal living tips with big impact and the ultimate frugal living tips you’re in the right place. This in our opinion some of the best old frugal tips and frugal hacks that’s out there and once you watch this video, you will see why.

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Frugal Facts is the channel giving you money saving tips; allowing you to live a more frugal lifestyle. If you have ever wondered how to be frugal, how to stop spending money, or just needed some frugal tips- this is the channel for you!
With every video we aim to provide you with ways to save money as well as saving money tips. We all want to save some extra cash, and feel like we need some frugal living tips, but often don’t know where to start. However, Frugal Facts is here to get you on the way to living frugal and enjoying your frugal lifestyle. If you need to know how to save money fast, or you want to achieve a frugal state of mind. Subscribe to us, and learn one video at a time how to live your frugal life.

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I remember my Mom and my Auntie sewing their own Curtains for the Kitchen and Bathroom. They both sew Clothes for the kids and my Mom made her own Evening Dress on her Singer Sewing Machine. As a child me and my older Sister would tag-along with both Mom and Auntie to JoAnn Fabrics Store, Woolworth and Michael's Craft Store to pick out Fabric and Sewing Patterns. My Mom (and Auntie) has both passed away from Cancer but, me and my Sister both got a sewing machine each. I got my Mom new Sewing Machine...Lol. I'm not good at Sewing like my Sister or Mom but, I'm still learning how to make small things like Bathroom Curtains. I loved being around my Mom in the kitchen growing-up. Both my Dad and Mom was excellent cooks (they both born in the South) so at the age of seven I learn how to cook everything. From delicious dinners to homemade desserts. And I still cook homemade meals and desserts just like my parents did. Nothing like living the Simple Life. Living Frugal keeps the stress away from getting into financial debt. And, yes both my parents worked Full-time jobs but, there was no Cellphone to take-up all your free time. Family Life is the best Life so, put down your devices more often. You can learn a lot from Wise Older Generation for real. 🙂🙂🙂

brendashort
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It is only my mum's generation who learnt to be spenders: I live like my grandma: I cook, bake, buy second-hand, recycle, compost, keep my flowers for 10 years, sew, patch and repair: as a biker, my jeans always get worn in "the seat", so I find an old piece of jeans that match the pants and thread that blends in, and save $35/11.000 liters of water= double life time on the jeans. I have everything I need, but not one unnecessary thing. I think before I buy anything and differ between a real need and a want. I buy top quality and design things and have them for many years, as they are timeless. Frugal doesn't mean poor, cheap or pennyless; a better way to say is careful: Think, plan, gather knowledge, keep your eyes open, wait and finally, buy what you need. I think the worst enemies to frugality is the need to feel rich and the need of immediately. Who said I don't have money? I use money wisely: others go to a café and pay $20 to sit down and be served. I brew my latte in a thermos, take a piece of cake and bike to a park: $1.25. Same result =a break, same taste. I refuse to do without anything good; I just do it in a different way. The big obstacle is that our mind sort things as "richer" and "poor". Is it worth $ 20 (that you might not are able to afford) for coffee and a cake? It helps you feel good=rich for 2 hrs, right?

anna-lenameijer
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GREAT video -- one of my daughter's favorite memories is her homemade "Raggedy Ann" Halloween costume when she was eight!

elainemonroe
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They were truly the " Greatest Generation!" I'd like to add: buy vintage items. They don't make 'em like that anymore!! I Love your channel 💕

HisLoveYou
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I cut my husband's hair and he cuts mine.I like it better than going to the salon.My husband grows a garden and I can and freeze.I cook at home and we don't eat out but rarely.

vernabryant
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Always watching your videos... it makes me inspire❤

Maureenpi
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I bought asparagus on sale. I'm dehydrating and vacuum packing it for soup later.

I reclaim gray water and bucket flush the toilet with it. I use a bidet with family cloths.

I use cloth napkins and handkerchiefs.

97% of my clothing is thrift shopped.

I water my laundry detergent by 50% and hang dry my laundry. I used my dryer three times last year.

There is a lot more I do, But you get the picture.

ninakoinz
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Knowledge is power! Here's the channel that provide powerful knowledge. 💯

supernaturalwealthprovisio
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The problem is most of our grandmas didn't work at least 8 hours per day outside the house...

sophiek
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We have a short time on this gorgeous planet, which we are destroying by our expensive habits.
*_1_* Let’s live a simple life. To be healthy and happy we only need clean air, pure water, good homemade organic food, a few clothes, and a good apartment.
*_2_* Leave these habits to the rich—going to the movies and theaters and opera houses, museums, rock concerts, stadiums, theme parks, and pricey restaurants and boutiques.
*_3_* Have a debit card, not a credit card.
*_4 Totally_* avoid fast food, junk food, and all (il)legal drugs (including coffee, tobacco, and alcohol).
*_5_* Use public transportation as much as possible. Keep plane trips to a minimum.
*_6_* Buy used clothes and shoes; stop buying designer clothing (Armani, Gucci, etc).
*_7_* Use little heating and cooling (from 60 °F to 79 °F).
*_8_* Keep washing dishes and doing laundry to a minimum.
*_9_* Shower for five minutes three to four times a week. 💕☮🌎🌌

totalfreedom
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Come on, take skills and time to sew, cook, grow food. Can be economical to outsource.

slowliving
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I do agree with most of your ideas. The comment about restaurants no preparing your food with cleanliness and safety is just plain fiction. I work in a restaurant and you wouldn’t believe the food that we throw away. Maybe in the future you can not generalize?

terriginsberg
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I'm sorry but it feels like 2 tips are constantly being repeated, only in a different way and as a different example...

XKatie
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A lot of what you are attributing to "Grandmotherly Wisdom" was just the effects of The Great Depression and WWII. Recycling during that war was a war effort promoted by the DOD, and a lot of the other "wisdom" you are presenting were patriotic propaganda campaigns from the US Department of Agriculture and other Federal government agencies. If anyone wants to know more, they should go to archives such as the Truman Museum and discover the real facts. Most grandmothers these days were born in the 50s, 60s, and 70s -not the times of extreme frugality!

annl