money saving

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cont. sauce

Tomato sauce & tomato paste are kitchen staples.

There is a money saving coupon out that you don’t want to miss!

You can find this coupon under zip code 74777.

Contadina tomato sauce – $0.44 (Walmart)

cont. q

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cont. paste

 

Contadina tomato paste – $0.56 (Walmart)

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Follow instructions below on how to change your zip code

Use zip code 74777

  • See how to change your zip code here.
  • Go to this link, type in desired zip
  • Click the blue arrow
  • Come back to the post, click the link for your coupon (and sometimes find your coupon at the top clipped)!

Look under ‘food’ for this coupon. 

Please note:  Unclip Dole Fruit Smoothie shakers coupon if you do not need it so you will save your ink

Thanks I Heart The Mart 

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rayovac

I don’t think you can ever have too many batteries on hand.

You never know when you are going to need them & it is nice to have a supply of all kinds available at all times.

Rayovac Batteries 8 pack – $4.97 (Walmart)

$1.00 off any Rayovac Alkaline Batteries
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See the full list of Walmart matchups here. 
Check out these money saving deals below …

Photo credit I Heart The Mart 

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atmgraphiclook

Thanks to  Tales of Domestica for passing along this up-cycle idea… great way to start your seeds on a budget!

If you would like to be a featured guest post on Look What I Made , watch for our weekly post each Tuesday called A Thrifty online craft fair, link up and you may be selected for our weekly feature post.

I am always looking for thrifty ways to work my garden. This is as thrifty as it gets, re-using toilet paper rolls for peat pots. I have done this several times through the years.

It is as easy as cutting the TP roll in half then cutting four slits and folding it like you would a box. Walla… you are done! Get to work and start planting your seeds!

The TP rolls will breakdown when you plant it out in the garden as a peat pot would.

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What is on a the menu at our house?

I get an email at least once a week asking me what I feed my family. Most of them are  just wanting to learn how to cross over from the habit of shopping daily for that days menu plan.  While others are convinced we eat  nothing but processed food.  They see the photos of what I buy that week and can not seem to wrap their brain around the idea of cooking from that weeks promo items and your stockpile.

Some of you “type A” personality’s  are much more organized than me, and I am sure there is a rotation chart or something fancy that would make menu planning easier.  But I do what works for me, I plan my meals around the fresh promo items that I get that week.  As well as what I get in my Bountiful Basket that week.  I then use my food storage or stockpile items, as well as freezer items to plan my meals. It’s how I live on less.

Being that I do not write my menu out a week in advance  I am sharing last weeks menu with you!  Hope it helps you understand that eating from your stockpile can be made a way of life,  is both rewarding and thrifty!

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

  • Breakfast- Cold Cereal
  • Lunch- Chicken Sandwiched from the left over fried Chicken, and Canned Pears
  • Dinner- Steak, Steamed Spinach with Rice and Bacon. (How I got Steak for almost free)

Wednesday

Thursday

  • Breakfast- Cold Cereal
  • Lunch- Ham and Cheese Sandwich, with carrot sticks
  • Dinner- Steak, Cheesy Potatoes and Cauliflower Pecan Salad (How I got Steak for almost free)

Friday

Saturday

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What is on a the menu at our house?

I get an email at least once a week asking me what I feed my family. Most of them are  just wanting to learn how to cross over from the habit of shopping daily for that days menu plan.  While others are convinced we eat  nothing but processed food.  They see the photos of what I buy that week and can not seem to wrap their brain around the idea of cooking from that weeks promo items and your stockpile.

Some of you “type A” personality’s  are much more organized than me, and I am sure there is a rotation chart or something fancy that would make menu planning easier.  But I do what works for me, I plan my meals around the fresh promo items that I get that week.  As well as what I get in my Bountiful Basket that week.  I then use my food storage or stockpile items, as well as freezer items to plan my meals.

Being that I do not write my menu out a week in advance  I am sharing last weeks menu with you!  Hope it helps you understand that eating from your stockpile can be made a way of life,  is both rewarding and thrifty!

Sunday

  • late breakfast/ early lunch- Orange Poppy Seed Muffins and Apple Juice
  • Dinner- Pot luck at Grandmas House


Monday

  • Breakfast- Ham and Cheese Omelet
  • Lunch- Peanut Butter and Jelly, and apple slices
  • Dinner-  Crock Pot BBQ Beef Sliders, Baked Beans and Corn

Tuesday

  • Breakfast- Hot Oatmeal and orange slices
  • Lunch- Ham and turkey sandwich, Carrot sticks
  • Dinner-Baked Chicken Strips, Rolls and Green Salad

Wednesday

  • Breakfast- Ham and Cheese breakfast burritos
  • Lunch-  Hot Dogs and Jello Salad
  • Dinner- Cheesy Baked Spaghetti and Green salad

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

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Thanks to  No time to be bored for this money saving  idea.  It made me smile because this is SO something my own Mom would have made.  My kids pajama tops are always to short so I LOVE this idea.

If you would like to be a featured guest post on Look What I Made,watch for our weekly post each Tuesday called A Thrifty online craft fair, link up and you may be selected for our weekly feature post.

Extending the life of clothes – making tops longer

By ~ No time to be bored

I think most moms recognize how fast kids outgrow their cute clothes. I found a way of making tops last longer, using some old t-shirts from myself that were on my ‘donation’ pile. It’s really fast and easy, I added this extra layer to these 2 pajama tops in about 15 minutes! So why not give this a try?

This would also work for boys’ clothes, with one little adjusment. I will give a step-by-step tutorial, I didn’t take pictures of the separate steps, but it’s so simple that you don’t really need the pictures to go with this.

1. Take the top that got too short, and find a t-shirt in a matching or contrasting color. For most clothes, even a simple white t-shirt would create a cute, layered look.

2. Cut off the bottom part of the t-shirt, about 1 inch longer than you want the bottom layer to finally be.

3. Flip the part you just cut off inside out. Measure how wide your kid’s top is. Zigzag the side of the part you cut off (inside out) so that it has the same width.

4. Then, trim off the excess fabric. Next, stitch on the inside of your zigzag with a straight stitch.

5. Now there are 2 different ways to proceed, depending if you want a ruffly bottom (like pictured) or just a simple, straight bottom.

For the ruffly bottom: Zigzag the raw edge of the “tube” you created with a small zigzag stitch. It will end up curly looking like the pictures above. Then, pin the tube with the finished edge underneath the bottom of the shirt, and attach with a straight stitch. (I just followed the seams that were already there to make it look neater. So you might want to do that twice if there where 2 originally.)

For a straight bottom: pin the raw edge of the “tube” you created underneath the shirt. Attach with a straight stitch. (I just followed the seams that were already there to make it look neater. So you might want to do that twice if there were 2 originally.)

And that’s it!

This would be even quicker if you would use a shirt that is of the same width, so basically combine 2 outgrown shirts. That way steps 3 and 4 could be skipped.

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