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6 Surprising Ways to Reuse Aluminum Foil

First Posted: 05/01/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 04:40 PM ET

Guest Post From The Daily Green

We love it when people repurpose old things to solve new problems. Aluminum foil is the most recent one, following a long string of creative repurposing, from oatmeal to vodka and pantyhose.

This time, we asked our resident Green Cheapskate, Jeff Yeager, to tackle aluminum foil. And boy did he ever. Who knew the shiny stuff could be so handy, beyond cooking or protecting your skulls from prying mind control beams?

Jeff wonders if the mandatory switch to digital TV has hurt sales of aluminum foil, since people no longer need to rig up their rabbit ears. Still, he notes that over 1.3 billion pounds of aluminum foil is produced every year in the U.S., and although it is highly recyclable, many curbside programs won't accept it for sanitary reasons (check with your local recycling program for their foil policy). That's a shame, because recycling aluminum uses only about 5% of the energy that it takes to produce aluminum from raw materials.

Here are some of Jeff's suggestions to get more bang out of your foil:

* Sharpen scissors and garden shears: Fold used foil so that it's six to eight layers thick, then cut thru it a few times with dull scissors to instantly sharpen them.

* Paint and plaster texture: Use crumpled up foil to add interesting texture to painting and plastering projects. Also when you're painting, old foil is handy for masking doorknobs and other fixtures you don't want painted, and wrapping your paintbrushes and rollers in during a lunch break.

* Deter pets and other animals: For no apparent reason, our cat started using our fireplace instead of her liter box. We put a couple of sheets of used aluminum foil on the floor of the fireplace -- which cats, dogs, and other animals can't stand -- to break her of that bad habit. Hang strips of used foil on strings around the garden to deter birds, deer and other unwanted pests, too.

* Protect young plants: Make a collar out of used foil to fit loosely around the stems of young tomato plants and other plant starts in order to keep cutworms and other insects at bay.


* Make metals shine: Scrub rust off of steel and chrome with a wad of aluminum foil instead of using steel wool -- it works even better. You can also use aluminum foil and simple household products like baking soda and salt to clean silver and gold, with the proper know-how.

* Repair stripped threads: People often say that I have a screw loose. When I do have a nut, bolt or screw with stripped threads, I wrap a little aluminum foil around the bolt or screw and try gently tightening it again. A quick temporary fix.

Now, if I could just find some creative ways to repurpose my old rabbit ears...

Check out Jeff Yeager's book The Ultimate Cheapskate's Road Map to True Riches. His Website is www.UltimateCheapskate.com, or Follow him on Twitter.

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01:38 PM on 03/10/2010
Google

Overcoming Consumerism

if you want to see a constellation of money saving things...

Nice site, not one ad anywhere on it and nothing for sale.
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MJinCanada
Safe from zombies until my 2nd cup of coffee
01:35 PM on 03/05/2010
Funny, our recycler will take aluminum foil and pans if you wash them first.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StrayTalk
01:35 PM on 03/03/2010
Used foil is great for cleaning inside of gas or charcoal grills.
09:54 PM on 03/01/2010
I have not done this trick but I heard you can use aluminium foil in your dryer to reduce static cling. I happen to wash my foil and reuse it unless it is pretty nasty.

Also, about those rabbit ears, you can dry delicates on the stems or plastic bags that you reuse over and over again.
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03:21 PM on 03/01/2010
Okay, about those rabbit ears. Take a collapsible ear, stick an alligator clip on it, and you can hold a match with it to light a pilot flame or a fire. Stick a magnet or hook or a piece of tape on it and you can use it to reach and retrieve things. I'm not very spry anymore and I like putting bent spoons on things like this to pick things up. You can put a brush or a swab or a cloth or just something sticky on it and use it to clean places that are hard to get to. They sell collapsible pointers that aren't much different from a rabbit ear. Tie a piece of string with a dangly something-or-other to it and entertain a cat.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jl4141
The Eighth Deadly Sin
02:13 PM on 03/01/2010
Makes a great substitute for chewing gum.
01:32 PM on 03/02/2010
painfully hilarious suggestion...
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Rosewren
The power of kindness is infinite
12:47 PM on 03/01/2010
We used to hang the used foil pie pans in the fruit trees, two on a string, the noise from them blowing in the wind also helped keep birds away from the cherry trees as well as the foil reflections.
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DocSkull
My questions aren't rhetorical.
11:26 AM on 03/01/2010
Tin hats for birthers.
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LeFlaneur
does nuance.
04:59 PM on 03/01/2010
Man, I clicked on this link just so I could write that verbatim. Thanks for ruining my day.
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VioletDatura
_-*-,,~*~_-*-,,~*~_-*-,,~*~
11:44 PM on 03/02/2010
Sympathy fanned
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reno1190
OBAMA WON WILLARD LOST,GET OVER IT
09:30 AM on 04/05/2010
me too, also they can use it for tin foil cups in this economy
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
VioletDatura
_-*-,,~*~_-*-,,~*~_-*-,,~*~
11:44 PM on 03/02/2010
Fanned
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10:10 AM on 03/01/2010
to live (somewhat) sustainably:

1. REDUCE consumption
(we are consumptive craphounds and industrialization depletes our natural resources & energy)

2. RE-USE
(re-purposing our stuff further reduces consumption)

3. RECYCLE
(least sustainable option, but better than nothing)