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All Things Feminine
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How to Use the Deluxe Edition
Written by Shiloah Baker   
Thursday, 22 October 2009
How to Use the Deluxe Edition

From 2002 to 2008 the Deluxe Edition was a separate site within the Homemaking Cottage with a username and password needed to access it.  In 2008 when we moved the website onto a content management system we no longer needed to keep the Deluxe Edition separate and now all the articles are integrated throughout the website, viewable only when logged in.

 

How Can I find the Deluxe Edition articles?

Homemaking Deluxe

You must first login.  Begin browsing the website within the sections on the left.  All articles marked :DLX at the end of the title are Deluxe Edition articles.

 

Sections

Each section has both regular and Deluxe Edition articles.   Some sections such as "Game Recipes" are only available to Deluxe Subscribers and do not appear until you are logged in.

 

Searching

You can search the site from the home page.  You will only be able to view Deluxe Edition articles in the results if you are logged in.  Otherwise the Deluxe articles will not be included in the search.

 

Deluxe Ads

Throughout the "main site" you will see little previews of related Deluxe articles. If you are logged in you can click to view the article.  If not, you'll need to login before clicking the link to avoid an error message.

 

 

 

"Women, for the most part, see their greatest fulfillment, their greatest happiness in home and family" -Gordon B. Hinckley

 

Home and Ideals

Whether built of logs or marble, by the surroundings picturesque or desolate, a spot marked by squalor or opulence, the four walls of a home close in and nurse the best there is in man...The birds on the garden shrubs unfold their secrets to the growing child, from birds, from blossoms, fruit seed, over and again he learns his first lessons of his relation to God and nature.  If art reigns in the home, there will grow out of it beautiful parks, streets and thoroughfares and cities...A life consumed by following society's unprofitable and foolish fashions has a parallel in that of a woman who never takes a moment for study and self-improvement, but makes herself a slave to her home.  The home must be kept sweet and clean, but the brain is as prone to get cobwebby as the best room.

(Excerpts from the Woman's Exponent, Feb. 1 & Feb. 15, 1901)

 

 

Do you have more questions?  Email us today!

How to Use the Deluxe Edition