Swedish Dishcloths for Kitchen Grey 10 Pack Reusable Compostable Kitchen Cloth Made in Sweden Cellulose Sponge Swedish Dish Cloths for Washing Dishes Reusable Paper Towels Washable

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$16.79

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  • LLP

    Greater than one week

    These are great! They are durable, absorbent and wear very well. They are a little small for a dishcloth but still like them. I have washed them in hot water with bath towels several times and they hardly show any wear. I do not put them in the dryer, I line dry them, they dry pretty quickly.

  • Jennifer

    > 3 day

    These are thicker and much more absorbent than other Swedish cloths I have tried. Also I love the dark gray color.

  • A-L

    > 3 day

    Being Swedish in the US, Ive missed having good dishcloths. I also dont like the smaller ones, or the ones that are a little bit thicker. These are a good size and thickness, so you can use them for any cleaning project you have. I have one in each bathroom to wipe the sink. They are also great for spills. No more wasting paper towles for a milk spill.

  • Lyn

    > 3 day

    These cloths clean well, look good, last a long time, and washup and disinfect in DW.

  • Jawnaldino

    > 3 day

    We switched to these rags a couple of years ago and won’t go back. We keep them in our kitchen and use them to clean everything. They are a nice size and also easy to clean. The only drawback I’ve seen is that they get stinky if you don’t wring them out when they are wet, which isn’t a surprise. Our last ones lasted about 2 years before they started to have holes and fall apart.

  • JESSICA

    > 3 day

    I was expecting some nice waffle type dish clothes. These arrive hard and stuff and after getting wet they do feel like a bunch of paper towels squished together. I was really concerned about this but gave them a try. So glad I did! These clean everything great, they dont have any plastic so they wont scratch delicate thing and the absorption is hard to beat! I spilled a fresh cup of coffee all over my counter and floor. I grabbed my towel I was using and it absorbed it right up. It would have taken a couple bath towels to clean up my mess. Seriously, how can 6oz spread that far! I was able to ring it out, rinse it and use it over again until the mess was cleaned up. They dry out fast so you can use them for a couple days in a row. The big test for me was washing. I wash all my towels in hot water along with a sanitizer in the rinse cycle and air dried them. They came out good as new! Yes they will eventually need to be replaced but its so much better for the environment!

  • R.Hector

    > 3 day

    These dishcloths are SO thick and absorbent! Cleans up spills quick and with ease. No need to use multiple paper towels. They are slightly stiff when they are dry and hold shape really well. They dont stink if you keep them balled up or have left them with some dish soap. Great for washing dishes or cleaning countertops.

  • Frankie Mason

    > 3 day

    First, this is called a dishcloth. It is similar to a dishcloth in absolutely no way. A dishcloth is flexible; this is either stiff like cardboard when dry or soggy and floppy. A dishcloth is large; this is a little rectangle, about half the size of a sheet of letter paper. A dishcloth is absorbent; this can absorb some water-based liquids and then will spread the rest around; it is a weak performer at absorbing oil-based and other spills. A dishcloth lasts for years; this supposedly lasts through multiple washings but not for decades like my good dishcloths. A really great cloth for cleaning up messes, if you want to be kinder to the planet than the paper towel hog, is called a rag. When I grew up, we used old clothes, towels and linens that could no longer be mended. These were laundered separately and reused. We didnt import sponges from Europe and call them cloth. Second, this does not replace rags or paper towels for spills. Imagine the cat tips over a fishy bowl of food. You reach for one of these hard little rectangles. It was not evident to me until after purchase that these cannot be used as is, like a dishcloth would be. You have to go to the sink and wet it, then wring it out, while the spill is dribbling from the counter to the floor, then the best you can achieve is to push the mess around a bit. The rectangle isnt big enough to scoop up anything and isnt absorbent enough to clear away the mess. Dont get me wrong, I am big on saving paper. I use dishcloths (REAL ones) for absorbing clean water, like drying dishes. I have a separate one for drying hands while cooking. I have a two-stage sponge plan for messes, one to get the majority of the mess and the second to clean up after the first. I do have paper towels and use those multiple times. If they are merely wet, say from cleaning a mirror, I let them dry and use them again for progressively dirty jobs, until they are thrown away. If something is spreading across the counter and dribbling and needs to be picked up quickly, good luck using one of these Swedish dishcloths. This brings me to a gripe about squandering the equity in the reputation of Sweden and, in particular, Swedish dishcloths. I happen to have studied Swedish looms and weaving. Swedish housewives were known to produce heirloom quality woven household items for their trousseau. To me the words Swedish in the name of the product and dishcloth are akin to Swiss watch. The best. So, these are not dishcloths and surely not Swedish dishcloths. The instructions say to wash these in the dishwasher or washing machine. Can you imagine that a dishwasher will really clean a stinky mess out of a sponge (which is what these really are, next point)? More likely, it will absorb oily and smelly substances from the dishes and spread them around the next time you use one of these to try to clean up. About sponges, that is what this is, exactly. You can get these in the grocery store for a tiny fraction of the rip-off cost of these. They are also made of wood pulp but do not have the pretentious and oh-so-precious claims of the pure Swedish woods aka tree farms. I was stupid, really stupid. I saw CNN touting these for a couple of months and finally decided to investigate them. They made it sound like anyone stupid enough to buy paper towels was destroying the environment instead of being really enlightened and, um, Scandinavian ... blue eyes, blonde hair, pure Aryans, definitely no Asians, whom we have characterized racially as enemies and whom bigots suggest when they boast that something is made in America. With such an unbelievably high price, I assumed they must be worth it, so I took the bait, not realizing Id be getting something identical to the flat sponges I got from the grocery store and rarely use. I really hate the misleading hype, so am suspicious about everything written on the package. A card with a font made to look like handwriting thanked me for supporting a small family business. Am I supposed to picture these blonde, blue-eyed, pure-at-heart Swedes making dishcloths in the family room by the fireside? Okay, a factory that is family owned. A lot of big businesses are small family owned. Small is the adjective modifying family, not business. Nothing like the small family businesses youd find on Etsy, for example, the unemployed husband in the basement crafting clothes hooks out of tree branches, the wife upstairs handling business accounts and correspondence from the kitchen table, the home-schooled children handling the packing and shipping. I happen to have wonderful dishcloths that I love using, some great sponges, rags like old T-shirts, and, yes, paper towels that I ration out only when absolutely prudent. What I dont have is this package of outrageously overpriced little cardboard sponges. Returned.

  • Sunny Dey

    > 3 day

    TheseSwedish dish towels save me from using a lot of paper towels. This is a great product and reusable as well as machine washable love this price product.

  • J. K. H.

    > 3 day

    These last a long time, do not show stains easily from coffee, blueberries, etc. I wash them in the washing machine weekly and they come out clean. Lasts for months!

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