Thursday 21 February 2013

Comparing Microfiber To Conventional Rags

Conventional rags, sewn in manufacturing facilities around the world, have always been the ‘old school’ go-to source when shopping for cleanup rags. As time passed on, many environmentalists were seeing how natural structures were being damaged for paper; for this reason, some ingenious character invented Microfiber Cleaning Cloths for prevalent use around America and beyond. Here’s how these ecofriendly rags stack against older generations of terry cloth or kitchen rags.

Anyone could take old clothing, terry cloths or anything with some cloth-like substance and wipe their counters, stoves or floors. It takes special pride in future environmental developments to choose microfibers over those rags. Sure, the wiping power is roughly the same, yet the sole difference is how, where and what process these rags are made. The engineering, manufacturing and packaging processes of truly green rags are 100% emission free; conventional rags usually manufacture with harmful chemical processes which are emitted into the atmosphere.
Housewives and general cleaning aficionados march to different beats; some have cost consciousness at heart while others have dependability concerns when purchasing cleaning supplies. Whereas both microscopic fiber rags and regular kitchen cloths offer equal cleaning power, the price tags are lower for old school rags since extra steps to protect the environment aren’t taken. Take the cleaning challenge yourself, and see which is more worthwhile: having inexpensive implements for household chores, or slightly higher priced goods that don’t damage your pride or environment. Choose wisely, however; our future will nearly become 100% green perhaps sooner than later.