Q: Wear oversized houndstooth caps, pork pie hats with a shallow brim, a bowler, or a trilby hat. Hats go great with simple outfits as well as with jackets. Wear a houndstooth cap with a jacket or a tribly hat with a pattern that matches your braces. Wearing black and white braces, also known as suspenders, is a common ska style. These are leather straps that go over your shoulders and connect to your pants. Often, they work best when they match hats, belts, and buttons. Braces come in Y or X shapes—choose whatever suits your style! Choose red braces for a more brash style. Stick to the early-1960s skinny style with black and white patterns. Ties are best when you're wearing just one shirt, such as a T-shirt or even a polo. Top it off with a tribly hat and you're good to go! Swap your braces for a tie to switch up your outfit! Wear a plain black or white belt, or find one with a checkered pattern. If you like to stand out, try a piano belt or studded belt. For wallets, you'll find similar checkered and black and white patterns common in ska shirts. Try wearing a red checkered belt if you're wearing red braces. You can wear pins and buttons anywhere, but they look best on jackets and backpacks. Most people like ones that are related to music or politics, but anything goes! Black, white, and red are the most common colors.  Look for pins and buttons with phrases like "I love ska!" if you're not into the political stuff. Pair a black and white pin with a black Harrington jacket and a checkered houndstooth hat. If you like sunglasses, wayfarers or wraparound shades and the most common in the 2-tone fashion world. Black is the most common color, although matching the color to your tie or braces always works. Wear your shades with a V-neck T-shirt, checkered braces, and a checkered trilby hat.
A: Add a cap with an eye-catching pattern to top off your outfit. Wear checkered black and white braces to match other accessories. Wear a tie to add some flair to a simple outfit. Wear some belts and wallets that match your tie's design. Attach retro pins and buttons to your jacket or backpack to add character. Top your outfit off with some shades for extra swagger.

Article: Spray your garden’s vulnerable plants regularly with a commercial or homemade deer repellent. These repellents typically contain components like sulfur, ammonia salts and capsaicin which deer find unpleasant. Even the store-bought varieties are concocted with natural ingredients and don’t make use of harsh chemicals that might damage your plants’ growth. Simply mist your garden every couple of days.  If you’re not inclined to shell out the money for a commercial repellent, try mixing up your own with eggs, garlic, ammonia, and/or hot sauce blended with water.  Be careful about using repellents on crops you plan to harvest and eat yourself. Compounds like capsaicin aren’t dangerous, but may influence the taste of edible plants. Deer are notoriously skittish creatures and are quite easy to scare off with the right stimulus. One particularly effective strategy is to put in a couple motion-activated sprinkler posts at the far ends of your garden or wherever deer tend to sneak in. When they get close, they’ll suddenly be doused with a unexpected jet of water from the sprinkler, which will send them running.  Installing a motion-activated sprinkler system is a pricier option, but one that is guaranteed to have repeated success. Along with its deterrent benefits, a sprinkler is also a convenient way of making sure your garden or yard is getting enough water. Loud, spontaneous noises are a surefire way to get rid of inquisitive deer. Whether it’s an electronic noisemaker on a timer, a set of jarring wind chimes or a simple well-timed clap of your hands, a deer won’t take any chances with what’s generating the noise. Even leaving the back door open to let the sounds of household activity escape can be enough to dissuade a deer from coming any closer.  Electronic noisemakers can be programmed to emit regular tones that will scare away deer but won’t disturb the neighbors. Try fashioning a set of non-harmonic wind chimes from aluminum cans or hollow wood cuttings. Deer often travel in herds at night to forage, mate and play. That means that they might stumble upon the scrumptious treats in your garden in the small hours when no one is around to ward them off. Fortunately, mounting an automatic flood light on the outside of your house or some other structure near your garden can do the job for you while you sleep. When the deer begin to creep up to that squash vine or begonia bush, the flood light will activate and the intruders will run for cover. Most flood lights work at a particular range and angle. When installing a flood light, make sure it’s properly calibrated to come on when movement is detected in the area of your at-risk plants.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Use a spray repellent. Install motion-activated sprinklers. Create noise to scare the deer off. Put in some automatic lights.

Q: Bleach, and especially vinegar, do well to break up the tars and resins in cigarette smoke. The smell of bleach and vinegar may be off putting at first, but unlike smoke, these odors will dissipate in time.  Mix equal parts of white distilled vinegar and warm water to create a cleaning solution. Mix 1/2 cup (115 mL) of chlorine bleach to 1 gallon (4 L) of water to clean surfaces like sinks, showers, bathtubs, countertops, glazed tile, vinyl, and floors. Always rinse surfaces with water thoroughly after cleaning, before use. Do not use bleach on the same surface that you applied the vinegar mixture to. You may need a ladder to reach all the washable surfaces in your house. Don't forget to wash down interiors of closets and cabinets as well as the walls of the basements, hallways, cupboards, and drawers. Put the vinegar in a spray bottle and wipe it clean with a rag. Follow up by rinsing with water and drying with a clean rag, if the furniture is delicate. Place several drops of lavender, citrus, or rosemary essential oil to offset the smell of the vinegar. If you do not choose to do this, the vinegar smell will dissipate as it deodorizes furniture. Simply wipe them or wash them in mild soap. You may want to remove them from the home until all surfaces are clean and deodorized.
A:
Use vinegar or diluted bleach to clean non-fabric surfaces. Wash the floors, ceilings, window screens, walls, and other fixtures. Wipe all the wood, plastic, and metal furniture and appliances with distilled white vinegar. Dust or rinse all your knick knacks.