Just an average Gal, older mom, trying to live a simple life & what happens along the way.
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Christmas & Hanukkah Wrapping Paper.....Frugal Alternatives to Buying It
Giving gifts at the Holidays goes back at least as far as the official celebrating of Christmas in our country-about 150 years. The history of gift wrap is almost as long.
In the 1800's wrapping a Christmas gift was not an elaborate affair. Usually the gift was presented wrapped in brown paper or white tissue paper, if it was wrapped at all. The forerunner of the modern 'Gift Bag' was used in this century as well, in the form of a paper basket or cornucopia.
At the end of the nineteenth century, mechanized technology evolved to the point at which colored paper could be printed cheaply in sheets large enough to be used for wrapping things. A rotary system that rolled huge lengths of paper onto tubes and cut them into usable sizes was developed in the 1890's and gave rise to the first American Gift Wrap Company, Hy-Sill Manufacturing Inc. in 1903. This company is still in existence today and celebrated it's 106th year in business in 2009!
But the Wrapping Industry's largest seller, Hallmark, landed in this business goldmine quite by accident. Hallmark's founders, the Hall Brothers, had a successful Greeting Card business in Missouri. They carried among the other secondary items in their turn of the century stationer's shop, tissue paper at Christmastime for wrapping holiday gifts in Christmas colors of red, green & white. In 1917 after selling out of their stock of tissue paper early, Rollie Hall, took some decorated sheets of paper for lining envelopes that they had imported from France, and put them out to substitute for the sold out tissue paper. This paper flew off the shelves and the following year they ordered extra to sell at Christmas time to wrap presents. This ersatz wrapping paper sold so well, the Hall Bros. developed their own decorated paper and began manufacturing it. Hallmark gift wrap now is one of the company's largest sellers!
The next big development that helped the wrapping paper industry grow was the invention of sticky cellophane tape. Until 1930, wrappers had to be a bit more creative to get their paper to stay put, using string, wax seals or later in the 1920's, small sticky foil seals.
The Jewish Holiday of Hanukkah often overlaps with Christmas as well, as it is also celebrated in December too. In the latter half of the 20th century in North America, it became commonplace for American jewish parents to give presents to their children at Hanukkah, over the course of eight nights(as well as or in place of the traditional gift of 'gelt' or gold coins)much in the way that Santa brings gentile children presents on Christmas Eve. This new consumer market gave rise to it's own expanding niche of gift wrapping paper and accessories for those who celebrate Hanukkah. The Hanukkah gift wrapping paper industry is now a multi-million dollar concern as well.
Nowadays, your choices of gift wrap are limited only by the imagination of the industry's designers. Any color, design, treatment are available. There are all kinds of ribbons, gift tags, and assorted charms to choose from. Even the artistically or craft-challenged can look like a pro with the pre-made bows and accessories sold today.
Though you can find deals on paper, bows and other trappings of the season, you can also end up paying quite a bit of money for the wrapping components when it is all added up.
Not only is the cost additional money out of your pocket, but there is an environmental cost that goes with all this consuming of natural resources for a product that is used once, briefly and then torn up and thrown away!
Consider for a moment the amount of garbage generated by this billion dollar industry. All the trees logged and no longer being able to generate life-giving oxygen. All those manufacturing plants pumping out non-degradeable plastic components like ribbon & bows, cellophane sheets for wrapping and tape.
All those resources clogging up landfills so we can have a pretty wrapped gift.
I don't think it's a very wise choice.
There are ways to lessen your negative impact on our world and still have your Holiday traditions of wrapping gifts. Here are some ideas....
1. If you have gift wrap already from past Holidays, use it, but Do Not buy anymore! Use up what you have. If you save from year to year your leftovers, you probably have more than enough already to get the job done this year.
2. Many people do not save and throw away each season, gift wrapping and accessories, buying new each year. Ask your friends and neighbors to let you 'adopt' their orphaned wrapping paper if they trash their leftover supplies after Christmas or Hanukkah.
3. Open your wrapped gifts gently and carefully instead of tearing into them like the Tasmanian Devil! If you unwrap gifts carefully you will have the paper to reuse and wrap another gift with next year. Take your iron, set on medium heat, and with the wrong side of the paper up, iron out any wrinkles and reroll onto an old cardboard tube you have saved. The wrapping paper will be good as new and ready to decorate a gift again.
4. Instead of buying pricey wrapping paper, try using 'found' papers around your house. The Sunday comics....you know, the colorful ones? They make a nice wrapping paper. I have even tried unused posters to wrap gifts. I had a stash of 'still in the package', unwanted leftover posters I used once as wrapping paper.
5. Try using brown or white butcher paper. It will be a more frugal choice and a bit better choice environmentally, since it cuts out the pollution generated by the inking process of the designs on wrapping paper. A minimalist look of unadorned paper can be quite beautiful too!
Decorate the plain paper with leftover stickers from the kids, or stamps & ink if you are into scrapbooking and have those handy. Give the kids crayons and let them loose in the plain paper wrapped gifts to artistically decorate them. Glue found objects of nature or old silk flowers laying around your craft box to the paper. You are limited only by your own imagination!
While all these ideas are creative and a much better alternative to going out and buying another bag full of commercially printed wrapping paper, even better is this idea.
6. Take a page from the Japanese culture by using a Furoshiki, a traditional wrapping cloth. You can buy them or make your own version. It's basically a square of cloth and among it's many uses, can be used like wrapping paper to cover a gift. If you have a length of cloth, you've got the makings of a Furoshiki cloth. An old tablecloth or skirt that's ready for the trash? Why not reuse that article and cut a Furoshiki out of it? If you can sew and hem it, that's great but it's not required. Use a piece of knit fabric and it won't unravel at the edges even or cut your cloth out using pinking shears for a decorative edge.
Do you know someone who sews? See if they have any leftover fabric you can have or if they can help you cut or hem the cloths. Check out thrift stores for fabric or even used tablecloths and napkins. An old napkin is the perfect size for many gifts and would make an instant Furoshiki cloth!
Check out the fabric stores after the Holidays when the Christmas and Hanukkah prints go on clearance. Pick up holiday fabrics for making Furoshiki cloths for next year for a greatly reduced price. This initial outlay of cash after the holidays for the fabric will save you money over the coming years as you won't have to buy wrapping paper every year and it will be better for the planet too.
Since it's not disposable, Furoshikis can be used again and again and over it's lifetime can help you save many natural resources. While many Asian cultures have a similar tradition, the recent Minister of Environment in Japan has taken upon herself to promote Furoshiki use as an eco-friendly alternative to the manufacture of plastic for bags and the consuming of wood resources as well. The Furoshiki cloth can be configured many different ways so you can be quite creative in your wrapping. There is a chart located HERE that shows the various ways to tie up a Furoshiki cloth.
As you can see, there are many alternatives to just plunking down more of your hard-earned cash to buy yet another roll of overpriced gift wrapping paper. It's not-so-good for your finances and it's definitely not friendly for our environment.
Go green by going frugal this Christmas!
Sluggy
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Celebrating Christmas Through the Years & a PLEA to You All!
I think that it is an absolute travesty that what should be one of the most joyous and peaceful times of the year has turned into such a cultural cesspool that people are driven to bankruptcy and even death in order to fulfill some perfect vision of what a Holiday should be in their minds!
There, I said it! Get out the whips and flog me.
The current American version of Christmas sickens me.
Some days I feel like Lucy in A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS, when she said, "Look. Charlie, let's face it. We all know that Christmas is a big commercial racket. It's run by a big eastern syndicate, you know."
The celebration of Christmas as we know it in America, has only been around for about 150 years. Christmas was banned in the Plimouth Massachusetts colony-our first colony that was settled for religious reasons. Nor was it celebrated in the Jamestown Virginia colony, the first colony that was founded by non-religious concerns.
Christmas only became a socially acceptable holiday in America in the mid to late 1800's. This 'crusade for a truly American Christmas tradition' was driven by writer Washington Irving's stories and the well-known poem by Clement C. Moore, "A Visit From St. Nicholas".
Graphic Artist Thomas Nast gave us the iconic image of Santa Claus in the 1860's(that the Coca-Cola Company basically appropriated). With the ending of the Civil War, the celebrating of Christmas as a national holiday took off.
You may think that the "over-the-top decorating and partying, shopping & gift buying frenzied" celebration of today is a recent evolution of the holiday. You would be wrong.
In Turn-of-the-century(1900's) New York there was a large backlash among reformers to downsize Christmas. These reformers called for an end to the commercialization of the holiday--the drunken partying, the lawlessness of the adult celebrating, the hawking by companies on consumers to spend on cheaply made knick-knacks. The problem then wasn't so bad in rural areas(because of the lack of mass transportation and the instantaneous exchange of information/news), more so in the urban centers in America. Rural areas of the country retained the more low-key, simpler traditions of homemade gifting and celebrating with family. Gifts were practical & substantial but did NOT put a person's economic stability at risk to give it.
While it's true that especially since World War II, companies have discovered that Christmas is a wonderful 'gimmick' that they can align themselves with to increase profits, companies have used anything they can think of, all through the last 110 years, to get people to spend as much money as possible on their 'stuff' at Christmas. Some of the successful early users of Christmas to increase sales of their goods were Coca-Cola, Hallmark, and various Department Stores who hired "Santa Clauses" to listen to little children's toy wants. By using the kids to get the parents into the stores, that was half the battle to get the parents to open their wallets and spend! Did you know that the 1st professional school to train Dept. Store Santas was created in 1937?
Somewhere in the last 40 years or so, the American version of Celebrating Christmas has become a full-blown Kid-centric Toy Orgy! Kids of my generation experienced a very different Christmas in terms of what "Santa" brought down the chimney from the children of today.
In my Husband's family, each child received 1 or maybe 2 toys on their wishlist. And these gifts were modest in price as hubby's parents at the time were on a low socio-economic level.
In my family, there was a set amount to spend for each kid(determined by my father, depending on how good his income was that year), and my mother bought what was requested from the wishlist until the money ran out. She literally had each child's money allotment in an envelope that she took to the store. No credit cards were used to buy whatever the hot toy was at the moment, to be paid off later, on income yet to be earned.
While that system may sound like a lot of 'stuff' was bought, I'll say that most years I received 4 or 5 presents from Santa(not counting the clothes which nobody wanted).lol My parents in no way spent an extravagant amount. When I was 16 years old, my 'Santa Loot' amounted to 1/4 of 1% of my father's net income. And let me add that 'things' were not bought for me continuously throughout the year also. Christmas and your Birthday(which was good for 1 substantial present)were it for the gift giving for children for the year.
While my husband and I keep the Santa toy-buying for our own children to what we feel is an appropriate amount in terms of numbers and costs, we have seen or heard the absolute ORGY of toys our kid's friends' parents or our friend's have given their kids through the years. It just boggles my mind why people, for example, feel the need to spend upwards of a Thousand Dollars on a 2 year old's Christmas gifts!
And it's not only people overspending on their childrens' gifts. It's the other family members' gifts, the co-workers gifts, the friends' gifts, the special clothing, the special food, the special decorating items, the parties, the outdoor light displays, the holiday trips, and on and on and on.....
I blame the media and businesses for the prevalent message every Christmas that in order to have the "perfect" holiday you have to BUY something. If you have THIS sweater, or THIS tree ornament, or THIS french truffle oil, you will have the BEST Christmas!
I also blame the "keeping up with the Joneses Syndrome". I MUST spend whatever the other guy spends or one-up-him and spend more. That means I am just as good as he is or makes me superior in some way.
And lastly, I blame grown-ups who act like children and refuse to exert ANY self-control over themselves and their spending. Hey! I work hard so I deserve to buy things I can't afford. It's my RIGHT! I'm going to spend what I want to have a Great time and not worry about tomorrow.
Here are my thought on spending money at the Holidays.
It's ok to buy things....gifts, decorations, special food, etc.
Ok, if you pay CASH.
Let me say that again.
I said CASH.
If you have to put an expense on a CREDIT CARD, it means you can NOT afford it and you should NOT BUY IT!
Pay CASH.
Don't spend money you don't have!!
If you don't have enough Cash, you can't afford it and you need to RETHINK your Financial Life.
The first step to redoing your Financial Life is to STOP SPENDING MONEY.
Have a simple Christmas.
Go back to giving of your TIME and YOURSELF to your loved ones.
You don't need to buy stuff for other people to have a Happy Christmas.
By STOPPING THE SPENDING THAT PUTS YOUR FAMILY into MORE DEBT, you will bless them so much more than giving them any toy, or sweater, or cheese log ever will!
GIVING YOUR FAMILY THE GIFT OF FINANCIAL STABILITY IS THE BEST GIFT YOU CAN GIVE!!!
PUT the CREDIT CARD AWAY!
Pay.
Cash.
ONLY!
Merry Christmas,
Sluggy
There, I said it! Get out the whips and flog me.
The current American version of Christmas sickens me.
Some days I feel like Lucy in A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS, when she said, "Look. Charlie, let's face it. We all know that Christmas is a big commercial racket. It's run by a big eastern syndicate, you know."
The celebration of Christmas as we know it in America, has only been around for about 150 years. Christmas was banned in the Plimouth Massachusetts colony-our first colony that was settled for religious reasons. Nor was it celebrated in the Jamestown Virginia colony, the first colony that was founded by non-religious concerns.
Christmas only became a socially acceptable holiday in America in the mid to late 1800's. This 'crusade for a truly American Christmas tradition' was driven by writer Washington Irving's stories and the well-known poem by Clement C. Moore, "A Visit From St. Nicholas".
Graphic Artist Thomas Nast gave us the iconic image of Santa Claus in the 1860's(that the Coca-Cola Company basically appropriated). With the ending of the Civil War, the celebrating of Christmas as a national holiday took off.
You may think that the "over-the-top decorating and partying, shopping & gift buying frenzied" celebration of today is a recent evolution of the holiday. You would be wrong.
In Turn-of-the-century(1900's) New York there was a large backlash among reformers to downsize Christmas. These reformers called for an end to the commercialization of the holiday--the drunken partying, the lawlessness of the adult celebrating, the hawking by companies on consumers to spend on cheaply made knick-knacks. The problem then wasn't so bad in rural areas(because of the lack of mass transportation and the instantaneous exchange of information/news), more so in the urban centers in America. Rural areas of the country retained the more low-key, simpler traditions of homemade gifting and celebrating with family. Gifts were practical & substantial but did NOT put a person's economic stability at risk to give it.
While it's true that especially since World War II, companies have discovered that Christmas is a wonderful 'gimmick' that they can align themselves with to increase profits, companies have used anything they can think of, all through the last 110 years, to get people to spend as much money as possible on their 'stuff' at Christmas. Some of the successful early users of Christmas to increase sales of their goods were Coca-Cola, Hallmark, and various Department Stores who hired "Santa Clauses" to listen to little children's toy wants. By using the kids to get the parents into the stores, that was half the battle to get the parents to open their wallets and spend! Did you know that the 1st professional school to train Dept. Store Santas was created in 1937?
Somewhere in the last 40 years or so, the American version of Celebrating Christmas has become a full-blown Kid-centric Toy Orgy! Kids of my generation experienced a very different Christmas in terms of what "Santa" brought down the chimney from the children of today.
In my Husband's family, each child received 1 or maybe 2 toys on their wishlist. And these gifts were modest in price as hubby's parents at the time were on a low socio-economic level.
In my family, there was a set amount to spend for each kid(determined by my father, depending on how good his income was that year), and my mother bought what was requested from the wishlist until the money ran out. She literally had each child's money allotment in an envelope that she took to the store. No credit cards were used to buy whatever the hot toy was at the moment, to be paid off later, on income yet to be earned.
While that system may sound like a lot of 'stuff' was bought, I'll say that most years I received 4 or 5 presents from Santa(not counting the clothes which nobody wanted).lol My parents in no way spent an extravagant amount. When I was 16 years old, my 'Santa Loot' amounted to 1/4 of 1% of my father's net income. And let me add that 'things' were not bought for me continuously throughout the year also. Christmas and your Birthday(which was good for 1 substantial present)were it for the gift giving for children for the year.
While my husband and I keep the Santa toy-buying for our own children to what we feel is an appropriate amount in terms of numbers and costs, we have seen or heard the absolute ORGY of toys our kid's friends' parents or our friend's have given their kids through the years. It just boggles my mind why people, for example, feel the need to spend upwards of a Thousand Dollars on a 2 year old's Christmas gifts!
And it's not only people overspending on their childrens' gifts. It's the other family members' gifts, the co-workers gifts, the friends' gifts, the special clothing, the special food, the special decorating items, the parties, the outdoor light displays, the holiday trips, and on and on and on.....
I blame the media and businesses for the prevalent message every Christmas that in order to have the "perfect" holiday you have to BUY something. If you have THIS sweater, or THIS tree ornament, or THIS french truffle oil, you will have the BEST Christmas!
I also blame the "keeping up with the Joneses Syndrome". I MUST spend whatever the other guy spends or one-up-him and spend more. That means I am just as good as he is or makes me superior in some way.
And lastly, I blame grown-ups who act like children and refuse to exert ANY self-control over themselves and their spending. Hey! I work hard so I deserve to buy things I can't afford. It's my RIGHT! I'm going to spend what I want to have a Great time and not worry about tomorrow.
Here are my thought on spending money at the Holidays.
It's ok to buy things....gifts, decorations, special food, etc.
Ok, if you pay CASH.
Let me say that again.
I said CASH.
If you have to put an expense on a CREDIT CARD, it means you can NOT afford it and you should NOT BUY IT!
Pay CASH.
Don't spend money you don't have!!
If you don't have enough Cash, you can't afford it and you need to RETHINK your Financial Life.
The first step to redoing your Financial Life is to STOP SPENDING MONEY.
Have a simple Christmas.
Go back to giving of your TIME and YOURSELF to your loved ones.
You don't need to buy stuff for other people to have a Happy Christmas.
By STOPPING THE SPENDING THAT PUTS YOUR FAMILY into MORE DEBT, you will bless them so much more than giving them any toy, or sweater, or cheese log ever will!
GIVING YOUR FAMILY THE GIFT OF FINANCIAL STABILITY IS THE BEST GIFT YOU CAN GIVE!!!
PUT the CREDIT CARD AWAY!
Pay.
Cash.
ONLY!
Merry Christmas,
Sluggy
Meal Plan Monday....December 14th Edition....Eating Down the Freezer/Stockpile
Last Week's Menu Postmortem...
Well I don't have one this week because I never got around to doing a Meal Plan. Ssshhhh....don't turn me in to the Meal Plan Police, ok?
In fact, I looked at past posts and I haven't done a Meal Plan Monday since Nov. 30rd, due to having the flu and just the general craziness around our home lately.
And if you refer to your calendar, today is Wednesday......so I'm more than a bit late this week!lol
Here's what I will be serving our family of 4 this Week.....
MONDAY--Kielbasa on rolls(freezer), Brussel Sprouts(freezer)
TUESDAY--Manicotti with Sauce(OAMC in freezer), Tossed Salad
WEDNESDAY--Apricot glazed Pork Chops, Rice(stockpile), Green Beans(freezer)
THURSDAY--Clam Chowder(homemade from scratch/stockpile), Biscuits(stockpile/fridge)
FRIDAY--Asparagus Quiche(stockpile/fridge), Tossed Salad
SATURDAY--homemade Pizza(stockpile/freezer)
SUNDAY--Not sure but probably Bacon wrapped Meatloaf as #1 son returns from college and it's one of his favorites(freezer/stockpile), Carrots(freezer), Mashed Potatoes(root cellar)
SNACKS/DESSERTS--Bread Outlet purchases(donuts/danish/pie), apples, grapes
Last week I spent $39.89 on food/toiletries. All of that was at Rite-Aid(except for 1 receipt)....seems I've been going there alot lately and nowhere else. Of that amount spent, I'll be getting $18.99 back in Rebates at Rite-Aid, so after rebates I spent $20.90....and $10 of my OOP spending last week was at the Bakery Outlet on breads and snacks. We've been splurging lately on ALOT of snacks. It's the holidays ya know.....lol
I did not set foot in a grocery store last week! I've been on an "Eating Down the Freezer/Stockpile Mission" this month. After 2 weeks of limiting food purchases to immediate needs for the week's meals, I am really noticing space opening up in the freezer. Not so much the stockpile though.
The next 2 weeks will see me getting more and more "creative" with meals as the freezer/stockpile gets lower. I'm going to attempt to use up more older items that have been hanging around here a bit longer so I can start the new year next month with a fresh 'food slate'.
The only items I need to buy this week for the menu are celery(chowder) and cream(chowder & quiche), as well as the weekly milk purchase. $10 should cover it. That leaves me extra cash this week for some more Rite-Aid deals. ;-)
Food Waste Report....some bread that didn't get eaten went moldy. I wanted to make a bread pudding with it before it turned but being sick, it just didn't get done. Other than that, we've been successful at giving the dogs most any leftover we can't finish, mixed in their kibble for dinner, so no waste otherwise.
Check out ORGANIZING JUNKIE to see what other Home Cooks are serving this week.
Sluggy
Well I don't have one this week because I never got around to doing a Meal Plan. Ssshhhh....don't turn me in to the Meal Plan Police, ok?
In fact, I looked at past posts and I haven't done a Meal Plan Monday since Nov. 30rd, due to having the flu and just the general craziness around our home lately.
And if you refer to your calendar, today is Wednesday......so I'm more than a bit late this week!lol
Here's what I will be serving our family of 4 this Week.....
MONDAY--Kielbasa on rolls(freezer), Brussel Sprouts(freezer)
TUESDAY--Manicotti with Sauce(OAMC in freezer), Tossed Salad
WEDNESDAY--Apricot glazed Pork Chops, Rice(stockpile), Green Beans(freezer)
THURSDAY--Clam Chowder(homemade from scratch/stockpile), Biscuits(stockpile/fridge)
FRIDAY--Asparagus Quiche(stockpile/fridge), Tossed Salad
SATURDAY--homemade Pizza(stockpile/freezer)
SUNDAY--Not sure but probably Bacon wrapped Meatloaf as #1 son returns from college and it's one of his favorites(freezer/stockpile), Carrots(freezer), Mashed Potatoes(root cellar)
SNACKS/DESSERTS--Bread Outlet purchases(donuts/danish/pie), apples, grapes
Last week I spent $39.89 on food/toiletries. All of that was at Rite-Aid(except for 1 receipt)....seems I've been going there alot lately and nowhere else. Of that amount spent, I'll be getting $18.99 back in Rebates at Rite-Aid, so after rebates I spent $20.90....and $10 of my OOP spending last week was at the Bakery Outlet on breads and snacks. We've been splurging lately on ALOT of snacks. It's the holidays ya know.....lol
I did not set foot in a grocery store last week! I've been on an "Eating Down the Freezer/Stockpile Mission" this month. After 2 weeks of limiting food purchases to immediate needs for the week's meals, I am really noticing space opening up in the freezer. Not so much the stockpile though.
The next 2 weeks will see me getting more and more "creative" with meals as the freezer/stockpile gets lower. I'm going to attempt to use up more older items that have been hanging around here a bit longer so I can start the new year next month with a fresh 'food slate'.
The only items I need to buy this week for the menu are celery(chowder) and cream(chowder & quiche), as well as the weekly milk purchase. $10 should cover it. That leaves me extra cash this week for some more Rite-Aid deals. ;-)
Food Waste Report....some bread that didn't get eaten went moldy. I wanted to make a bread pudding with it before it turned but being sick, it just didn't get done. Other than that, we've been successful at giving the dogs most any leftover we can't finish, mixed in their kibble for dinner, so no waste otherwise.
Check out ORGANIZING JUNKIE to see what other Home Cooks are serving this week.
Sluggy
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
CHEAP CHOCOLATE this Week at Rite-Aid & a Prell Update
Got Holiday Chocolate?
Get chocolate this week for cheap at Rite-Aid.
Here's how.....
Grab a $5 off $20 AdPerks IPQ for watching videos.
Then grab 2 x Buy3/Get1 Free ManuQs for Hershey's Kisses.
Also grab 1 x $1/2 Hershey's Candy Bags ManuQs.
Go to Rite-Aid and buy.....
8 x Hershey's Kisses bags on sale this week for $1.99 ea.=$15.92
2 x Hershey's Candy bags(not Kisses tho)on sale this week for $1.99 ea.=$3.98
1 x Hershey's Single Candy Bar on sale this week for $.50=$.50
SubTotal....$20.40
Use your Coupons...
$5 off $20 purchase=$5.00
2 x Buy3/Get1 Free $1.99 x2=$3.98
1 x $1/2 Hershey's Bags=$1.00
Coupon Total....$9.98
$20.40-$9.98=$10.42 OOP
Submit for the SCR#44(Buy $20 of Hershey's/M&M's, Get $5 Rebate).
$10.42-$5 rebate=$5.42 OOP.
10 bags of chocolate for $5.42, or just over $.54 a bag!
If you would rather get M&Ms instead of other non-Kisses Hershey chocolate you can buy 2 bags of M&Ms instead of the 2 Non-Kisses bags and use the $1/2 M&M's ManuQ in the RP insert for the same OOP.
As for the Prell 'Poo Hunt.....I checked out a different Rite-Aid this evening and they don't even carry Prell Shampoo. My usual R-A carries it but they have just 1 slot for it, so not many on the shelf here and it's on the bottom row too. All they have room for is 5 on the shelf anyway....I should check back and see if they actually ordered any more for this week, with the sale on and all.
I'm going by another RA tomorrow so I'll pop in and see if they carry it. I remember when I was younger, Prell was a big name in the 'poo biz....they even ran tv ads. Breck is another 'poo brand you just don't see anymore either. I guess I am dating myself, huh?
Has anyone been able to find any Prell out there? Let us know what state you are in if you have.
Sluggy
Monday, December 14, 2009
Sunday at Rite-Aid....Serious Moneymaker!
Not a great week for Rite-Aid freebies but I was able to put together an awesome Moneymaker.
5 x Prell Shampoo on sale $.99=$4.95
1 x Chapstick Fresh Effects=$2.99
1 x Nivea Lip Gloss=$2.99
1 x SpinBrush on sale=$5.99
1 x Revlon Eye Shadow on clearance=$1.74
1 x Revlon Tweezer on clearance=$.61
1 x Revlon Pumice Stone on clearance=$.94
SubTotal....$20.21
Coupons Used
1 x $5 off $20 RA/AdPerks Q=$5.00
1 x $2/1 SpinBrush ManuQ(sometime in Oct./also 1 in recent insert)=$2.00
1 x $2/1 Revlon color product ManuQ=$2.00
2 x $1/1 Revlon beauty tool ManuQ=$2.00
Coupon Total....$11.00
$20.21-$11.00=$9.21+$.47=$9.68 OOP
Not a very low OOP BUT.....
here are the SCRs I qualified for with this purchase--
1 x Chapstick $2.99(full purchase price rebate)
1 x Nivea Lip product $2.00
1 x SpinBrush or refill $2.00
5 x Prell @$2.00 EACH=$10.00(you can do this rebate up to 5 times!)
SCR Total....$16.99
$9.68OOP-$16.99Rebates=$7.31 Moneymaker
Oh Yeah!!!
Also worth doing this week if you wear make-up is the Cover Girl SCR. It's on sale for $3.99 this week and paired with the recent $1/1 Cover Girl ManuQ, you pay $2.99 AND can submit for a $2.00 SCR. The limit on this SCR is 5, so grab a $5 off $20 AdPerks Qs, 5 of the $1/1 Cover Girl Qs and do this....
5 x Cover Girl Make-up @$3.99=$19.95
Add another item with a SCR, like a bottle of Prell(which would make this scenario a MM)or the Chapstick(full purchase price SCR)or a teeny tiny priced filler item.
With the $5/$20 and the CG Qs, the make-up will cost you Zero OOP.
**And be sure to check your Rite-Aid for CLEARANCE in the Make-Up Dept. I found those Revlon things for 75% OFF! Plus the $1/1 Revlon Tool and $2/1 Revlon Color Product made them BETTER than free! The Qs did NOT adjust down and the cashier didn't bat an eye about that.lolol
That kind of makes up for the fact that we didn't get any Cover Girl Qs in our region's inserts, so I can't do the Cover Girl Deal at Rite-Aid but I can still get free make-up anyway.lolol
Sluggy
5 x Prell Shampoo on sale $.99=$4.95
1 x Chapstick Fresh Effects=$2.99
1 x Nivea Lip Gloss=$2.99
1 x SpinBrush on sale=$5.99
1 x Revlon Eye Shadow on clearance=$1.74
1 x Revlon Tweezer on clearance=$.61
1 x Revlon Pumice Stone on clearance=$.94
SubTotal....$20.21
Coupons Used
1 x $5 off $20 RA/AdPerks Q=$5.00
1 x $2/1 SpinBrush ManuQ(sometime in Oct./also 1 in recent insert)=$2.00
1 x $2/1 Revlon color product ManuQ=$2.00
2 x $1/1 Revlon beauty tool ManuQ=$2.00
Coupon Total....$11.00
$20.21-$11.00=$9.21+$.47=$9.68 OOP
Not a very low OOP BUT.....
here are the SCRs I qualified for with this purchase--
1 x Chapstick $2.99(full purchase price rebate)
1 x Nivea Lip product $2.00
1 x SpinBrush or refill $2.00
5 x Prell @$2.00 EACH=$10.00(you can do this rebate up to 5 times!)
SCR Total....$16.99
$9.68OOP-$16.99Rebates=$7.31 Moneymaker
Oh Yeah!!!
Also worth doing this week if you wear make-up is the Cover Girl SCR. It's on sale for $3.99 this week and paired with the recent $1/1 Cover Girl ManuQ, you pay $2.99 AND can submit for a $2.00 SCR. The limit on this SCR is 5, so grab a $5 off $20 AdPerks Qs, 5 of the $1/1 Cover Girl Qs and do this....
5 x Cover Girl Make-up @$3.99=$19.95
Add another item with a SCR, like a bottle of Prell(which would make this scenario a MM)or the Chapstick(full purchase price SCR)or a teeny tiny priced filler item.
With the $5/$20 and the CG Qs, the make-up will cost you Zero OOP.
**And be sure to check your Rite-Aid for CLEARANCE in the Make-Up Dept. I found those Revlon things for 75% OFF! Plus the $1/1 Revlon Tool and $2/1 Revlon Color Product made them BETTER than free! The Qs did NOT adjust down and the cashier didn't bat an eye about that.lolol
That kind of makes up for the fact that we didn't get any Cover Girl Qs in our region's inserts, so I can't do the Cover Girl Deal at Rite-Aid but I can still get free make-up anyway.lolol
Sluggy
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