Swedish Dish Cloth - Flowers
DESCRIPTION
Add some flair and fun to your kitchen! Inspired by the Scandinavian tradition of reusing natural dish cloths. With these you will never need paper towels again.
Replace 17 rolls with just 1 dish cloth. It absorbs 20x its own weight. You save money, plastic packaging and waste. The super sponge!
1 Dish Cloth 8" x 6.75" - perfect to have next to the kitchen or bathroom sink
MATERIALS
❤ 70% FSC Certified Wood Pulp Cellulose from Europe
❤ 30% Cotton from Europe
❤ Water Based Ink
ORIGIN
Made in Europe and the USA.
The raw material is from Europe and the design & printing is done in Connecticut.
Non-Toxic: All-natural, no synthetics, printed with non-toxic water based ink, hygienic (air dries quickly, doesn’t breed bacteria or smell)
Zero waste: Long-lasting (won't crumble), reusable, plastic free, 100% biodegradable, compostable, package free
Vegan: No animal-based ingredients
Giving: Three Bluebirds is a member of 1% for the Planet, so 1% of profits go to organizations that help the environment
Eco-friendly: The wood pulp comes from FSC certified, sustainably managed forests. Cotton is a renewable material which can be harvested, regrown and harvested again.
HOW TO USE & CARE
Simply rinse under water, squeeze out and use to soak up liquids or clean up crumbs, a mirror etc. Then rinse out, squeeze and lay over the faucet or sink to dry.
Can be used with just water, soap, or cleaners. Cleans counter tops, granite, stainless steel and glass. Cleans virtually streak-free.
MACHINE WASHABLE. Throw them in your laundry! You can wash them with your clothes up to 200 times.
For the longest life, AIR DRY them and never tumble dry in the dryer!
Can also be boiled to get sanitized.
MEET THE MAKERS
Three Bluebirds was founded by Lynda and Lasse Baldauf, in Old Greenwich, Connecticut in 2013. Having grown up in Finland, Lasse remarks, “It was completely natural to reuse dish towels. In Europe, we never used paper towels. We’d wash and recycle naturally.”
The original Swedish dishcloth material was invented by a Swedish engineer in 1949. Three Bluebirds dishcloths are made with this same material.
“Not growing up in Scandinavia,” Lynda adds. “I learned about the sustainability factor from Lasse. When I visited Finland, back in 1987, shoppers were taking their own cloth bags to the market, like we do here now. They were way ahead of the curve with the environment.”
Photos: Three Bluebirds
In addition to promoting environmental preservation, the couple’s intention is “to make people smile” with the towel’s hand-drawn childlike and heartwarming designs, created by Lasse. Embracing Scandinavian simplicity, functionality, and aesthetics.
“In Native American symbolism, 'bluebirds' are considered a sign of love and joy,” says Lynda. “I loved the imagery.” The ‘three’ is for Lasse and their two daughters.
“I love the idea, ‘whatever blesses one, blesses all.’” - Lynda