View Full Version : Shop Towels Instead of Paper Towels
TheHans
Oct 31st, 2007, 01:26 PM
We use Shop Towels (those blue towels you get in the automotive section) for just about anything one would use paper towels for. They're more absorbent than your average paper towel *and* they can be washed and reused endless times. We bought a roll (under $3) about four years ago and we're *still* using it.
We keep a roll of extremely cheap paper towels around in case there's something really unsanitary that one must clean up, like if one of our cats has a piece of poop sticking on his butt, we'd use a paper towel to take it off and throw it out. Having said this, we bought a double-pack of paper towels two years ago and still haven't gone through the first roll.
Anyway, after you use the Shop Towels, let them dry out or just throw them in with the other clothes for washing. They just wash normally, they don't tear apart or anything. After washing, hang them on a rack or whatever. They dry in a couple of hours. They dry in less than five minutes in the dryer and don't shrink at all. Then just roll them up. Like I said, absorbent, strong and *cheap*. And good for the environment.
The Hans
j27lee
Oct 31st, 2007, 03:15 PM
Didn't know they were that durable! i'll have to try this out
nano
Oct 31st, 2007, 06:00 PM
i use these shop towels in the kitchen as well... they are great really thick i usually use one a day in the kitchen. Parts source usually has them on sale once a year for 99 cents try to get as much as i can
CanadaBoy
Oct 31st, 2007, 07:54 PM
i use these shop towels in the kitchen as well... they are great really thick i usually use one a day in the kitchen. Parts source usually has them on sale once a year for 99 cents try to get as much as i can
Around when ?
jayk
Oct 31st, 2007, 08:14 PM
are these different from the microfibre auto cloths?
TheHans
Oct 31st, 2007, 08:22 PM
are these different from the microfibre auto cloths?
They aren't microfibre cloths. They're super-strong paper towels of some kind. They're in a blue roll, kind of like paper towels.
The Hans
Impossibles
Nov 1st, 2007, 04:07 PM
What are these made from? Are they cotton or wood product, or are they synthetic?
TheHans
Nov 1st, 2007, 07:24 PM
What are these made from? Are they cotton or wood product, or are they synthetic?
No idea really. They certainly feel like paper. But they're reinforced somehow. This is the site:
http://www.kcdiy.com/diy/products/Shop-Towels.asp
They're made by Kimberly-Clark. Which also suggests they might be paper somehow, because doesn't Kimberly-Clark make all those name-brand paper towels?
The Hans
nelsonmp5
Nov 1st, 2007, 11:38 PM
I believe it is more green to use paper towels that can go into the green bin.
Shop towels that are washed require the use of soaps and that polutes the environment. There's too much soap and phosphates in the sewage already.
Paper towels are compostable and come from renewable resources.
TheHans
Nov 2nd, 2007, 01:11 PM
I believe it is more green to use paper towels that can go into the green bin.
Shop towels that are washed require the use of soaps and that polutes the environment. There's too much soap and phosphates in the sewage already.
Paper towels are compostable and come from renewable resources.
Most people have to wash their clothes anyway one way or the other. You don't wash them in a special way, you just put them in with the clothes. And you can choose to use phosphate-free and/or environmental-friendly soaps.
And one roll of Shop Towels lasts for *years*. With the money you save, you can buy the more expensive, aforementioned environmental-friendly soap. :-)
There's a difference between re-using and constantly using new things, whether they're compostable or from renewable resources. Even if you use paper towels that are from recycled paper *some* energy and god-knows-what has gone into producing them. I'm more on the "use less" side. I think it's just simpler. That's just my point of view.
The Hans
Impossibles
Nov 2nd, 2007, 02:54 PM
No idea really. They certainly feel like paper. But they're reinforced somehow. This is the site:
http://www.kcdiy.com/diy/products/Shop-Towels.asp
They're made by Kimberly-Clark. Which also suggests they might be paper somehow, because doesn't Kimberly-Clark make all those name-brand paper towels?
The Hans
They also make huggies, which are synthetic 'disposable' diapers.
artekds
Nov 30th, 2007, 08:04 PM
Thanks OP for the great tip. I have an unopened roll sitting on my shelf for a few months, time to start saving !!!
eelfliw
Dec 2nd, 2007, 05:30 AM
I use shop towels on Swiffer. After it gets dirty, I change it and thrown the dirty one into the hamper with the floor mats. When the hamper gets full, I take it to the laundro mat where everything gets cleaned (never wash floor mats in my own washer) for re-use.
I've done this for 2 - 3 years and still on the first roll of shop towels. That's way cheaper than buying new swiffer pads.
stealth
Dec 4th, 2007, 12:12 PM
I use shop towels on Swiffer. After it gets dirty, I change it and thrown the dirty one into the hamper with the floor mats. When the hamper gets full, I take it to the laundro mat where everything gets cleaned (never wash floor mats in my own washer) for re-use.
I've done this for 2 - 3 years and still on the first roll of shop towels. That's way cheaper than buying new swiffer pads.
FTW! Great post, thanks.