Get Creative
If you’re the arts and crafts sort, take a look at what you have at home. That alone can present numerous possibilities. You can turn old clothes into beds for pets, or paint empty old bottles to create decorations for the garden. Sell these to your neighbours or use eBay and Etsy as platforms to sell your wares.
You Don’t Have to Be an Artist
On the other hand, you don’t have to have magic fingers to recycle old items. Ratty old clothes can be used as rags for spring cleaning before you send them off to a recycling centre for processing. Any other items that you don’t want or need but still have some use in them can be sold at a garage sale. Again, eBay can help you out here. Empty wine bottles and corks can be sold online and some people may pay as much as $5 for an empty bottle.
Visit the Junkshop
Old newspapers, books and other paper products can net you some serious cash at your local junk shop. Scrap metals like aluminium, tin, and copper can also sell at a good price. Copper recycling in particular, McCamish Metals notes, is common because the metal will not break down and corrode when processed. In fact, most copper products are made from recycled copper.
Most people who live in the city no longer drink tap water. Water bottles can pile up and you can either sell them at a junkshop or perhaps make a deal with your provider to give you a discount when you return used bottles to them.
Keep an Open Mind
It still holds true that what you may view as worthless can be turned around by someone else. Be open to possibilities or, at least, know where to take your waste. There is a lot of trash that can turn to cash if you know what to do.