Medicine

Medicine
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Don’t keep your medicine in your medicine cabinet. We’re not just saying that to be ironic. Medicines and vitamins should be stored at a room temperature, below 25°C. Keeping them in a moisture-filled room, like your bathroom, can make them less potent or cause them to go bad before their expiration date

Check out these highly effective folk medicine remedies from around the world.

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Towels

Towels
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Bathrooms are the perfect breeding ground for mould and mildew, and your towels are easily susceptible to these gross fungi. It’s fine to keep one towel hung up in the bathroom, as long as you swap it out once a week. Turning on an exhaust fan can help dry out the room and your damp towel faster.

Find out which bathroom etiquette rules people break all the time – but shouldn’t.

Bathrobe

Bathrobe
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Another bit of ironic advice: keep bathrobes out of the bathroom. Just like towels, damp robes could harbour bacteria, and humidity can give them a musty odour. Let them dry in your wardrobe instead of on a hook in your bathroom.

Find out which plants are perfect for keeping in the bathroom.

Books

Books
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We get it – it can be nice to have some reading material available while you’re doing your business. But the books and magazines that are kept in the bathroom will absorb moisture, leaving you with wrinkled pages and deteriorating binding.

Don’t miss these books that everyone should read before they die.

Jewellery

Jewellery
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Jewellery boxes are generally kept on dressers and vanities for good reason. The humidity from your bathroom can make jewellery tarnish more quickly than normal, especially when it comes to sterling silver. Store your jewellery in a cool, dry place. Keeping it in an airtight bag is another effective method.

Toothbrush

Toothbrush
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Yes, all the rumours you’ve heard are true. A 2012 study from Manchester University in England found that your toothbrush may house more than 10 million bacteria, and a portion of that comes from faecal matter that’s sprayed around the room every time you flush the toilet. To keep your brush as germ-free as possible, rinse and air-dry it after each use, and, if you still choose to store it in the bathroom, close the toilet lid before you flush – and definitely, don’t store in next to the toilet.

Here are some bad hygiene habits that are way worse than you thought.

Makeup

Makeup
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Leaving your prized makeup products in the bathroom exposes them to a lot of unwanted heat and moisture, which allows mould and other bacteria to spread and make your makeup go bad faster. And like toothbrushes, makeup brushes are also bound to get contaminated with faecal matter from sprayed toilet water. That’s something you definitely don’t want touching your face.

Here are some tricks to make your makeup last all day, according to pros.

Perfume

Perfume
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Heat and perfume just don’t mix. The experts at perfume.org say that fluctuations in temperature (the kind that can occur when you take steamy showers) can destroy the molecular integrity of your fragrance and cause it to sour.

Read on for the harmful beauty product ingredients that you should swap out.

Nail polish

Nail polish
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Most nail polishes will last about two years, but leaving those bottles in the bathroom can make them go bad – toss nail polish that doesn’t blend, is too thick, or looks crumbly – much faster. Again, heat and humidity are the culprits.

Don’t miss these tips to get healthy, gorgeous nails.

Razor blades

Razor blades
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It’s fine to keep your current razor in the shower, but extra razor blades should be left outside of the bathroom. Otherwise, the humidity may rust or dull them before you even start to use them, Good Housekeeping reports. Drying razors after each shave can help keep them more effective longer.

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