Clean Suede Naturally


I recently wore my beloved suede clogs out with friends and almost immediately had revelers' spilled drinks sloshing between my toes. This is pretty standard in crowded NYC bars (or any bar, anywhere for that matter) but my heart completely sank when I found this mess waiting the next day.

What. A. Bummer.


Thankfully, no special, chemical-loaded cleaner is required since I found a natural alternative that's 100x easier and, best of all, emits no noxious fumes.

I set to work and grabbed:

  • Clean Towels
  • A Rubber Eraser
  • A Stiff Bristle Brush 

Make sure your rubber eraser is nice and gummy and remove any pencil lead from the surface by rubbing it vigorously over a clean piece of paper. 

Pretty much any natural bristle brush will get the job done, as you just want something that will brush up the nap of the suede and sweep away loose particles. I didn't have a shoe brush, so I improvised with this clean scrub brush and it worked great.


The first part of the process will immediately improve the look of your suede by removing any surface dirt and refreshing the nap of the leather. 

Brush the suede thoroughly with a clean, dry rag. Make sure you rub the suede in many different directions to ensure you're agitating the nap completely and getting all the dirt. Go over stubborn spots a little more vigorously with your cloth.


Step one just reduced my stress level significantly and got off the majority of the spots, leaving all the dirty evidence on my rag.


But there's still plenty of small, set water stains to tackle.


So, out comes the gum eraser.


Rub the eraser in a circular motion over each stain.


Use your bristle brush to remove the eraser rubber and loosened dirt. Repeat on all stains.


And that, friends, is one clean pair of shoes.


Suede, while durable and beautiful, is expensive. This impossibly easy, natural way to clean it will save many an item and many a dollar through the years.

I used HAVEN Polish to clean and condition the wooden soles and now these babies are ready to pound some more pavement.


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HAVEN Cleans // Before & After


I must admit that I have a strange love of Before & After pictures. I get pretty nerdy over a good transformation!

What better way to indulge than to show you a few of the ways HAVEN products can can be put to great use around the home.

POLISH is definitely one of the products I use the most. Coconut oil is an incredibly versatile natural ingredient and can shine up scuffed leather, wood (finished and unfinished), painted surfaces, smudges on stainless steel, rubber, car interiors and more. This special formulation restores luster to just about anything -- who knew one bottle could do so much?

SCRUB is also one of those great products that does more than you ever imagined. Just one canister will not only scour and clean just about every hard surface, it also melts tarnish off of copper and brass and adds a sparkle to dull stainless steel with the power of all natural fruit acids.


Check out all the amazing ways you can use each HAVEN products on our PRODUCT GUIDE page!

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Polish Silver Naturally


A customer recently asked me if I had anything to clean silver and, while HAVEN's SOAP and SCRUB are both excellent for removing tarnish on all sorts of metal, there's also a great DIY way to clean silver that has tarnish in hard-to-reach crevices. All you need is a bowl, very hot water, baking soda and a piece of aluminum foil. Sounds simple but it really works.

Tarnish on silver occurs when Hydrogen Sulfide comes into contact with the metal. This substance is in the air, on your hands, in rubber, wood and several different kinds of food, so you can see why silver tarnishes so quickly when not protected from the elements. The reaction that occurs when you mix aluminum, baking soda and hot water obliterates that Hydrogen Sulfide and instantly removes it from silver. Here's how!

Assemble your supplies and put some water on the stove to start heating (it doesn't need to be boiling, just very hot). Get an old towel for polishing up the silver afterward, a large bowl, a square of aluminum foil and about a tablespoon or two of baking soda.



Here are my tarnished bracelets. Looking pretty blah. 



Next, place your square of foil in the bottom of your bowl. 



Add the baking soda right on top of the foil.



Add your silver to the bowl.



Your water should be pretty hot by now, just to the point of boiling



Carefully pour into the bowl enough water to cover the jewelry completely. There will be lots of bubbling and fizzing. You'll smell the Hydrogen Sulfide dissolving off the silver, so if it smells like eggs, you'll know it's working. 

If some of the tarnish isn't coming off instantly, trying separating out the jewelry so that each piece is touching the aluminum foil. It's this contact with the foil that creates the strongest chemical reaction. Once the pieces have been soaking for two to five minutes, I like to put on rubber gloves, ball up the foil and, with the jewelry still submerged in water, gently rub the foil all over the remaining spots of tarnish to remove the last bits.



Remove your silver and delight in its shininess! This big bangle had some deeper tarnish in the grooves, so I just used an old towel to polish and remove the rest of it while the bracelet was still wet and the rest came melting off. 

Another easy, chemical-free alternative to add to your roster of DIY recipes!




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