Here's some more interesting info........
Cannon & Fieldcrest
make a lower quality version of their towels for K-Mart, Walmart and other
big discount chains.
These towels say 100% Cotton but that is not,
totally true. The nap is 100% cotton but the backing material has polyester
blend in it.
So if you press a little to hard on the towel you can get
some fine scratches or swirls.
The point I'm trying to make is if a
Cannon or Fieldcrest towel is selling in a discount store for $6.00 or less
(approximately) it is not the good stuff.
I buy all my Cannon &
Fieldcrest towels in the Bath & Linen shops in the bigger stores in the
mall. I pay anywhere from $10 to $20 per towel. These are the real deal. I
buy about 3 or 4 towels and they usually last me about a year.
Now for
you guys that may have already purchased the lower price towels. Look
carefully at your paint finish when you are using your towels. If you are
not getting any swirls or fine scratches, then you are okay. Remember it's
better to be safe than swirly.
Another problem I'm seeing is some of you
guys are using powdered detergent to wash your towels. Powdered detergents
contain granules that do not fully dissolve in the wash cycle and get trapped
in the nap of the towels, these granules will scratch your paint finish....
Only use Liquid detergents like All or Tide. Also do not use Bleach or any
kind of fabric softner.
You must use only white. Not colored
towels.....Colored towels are not to be used because the dye leaves a
chemical residue on the paint finish. Always wash your towels first before
using. Use Liquid detergent and rinse twice.
You should cut the
selvages(borders) off the perimeter of the towels. This selvage contains
nylon and polyester stitching that could possibly scratch your paint finish.
The towels will fray a little once this is done. But it's better to play it
safe.
Drying the towels on high heat will make them hold a static charge.
I use the regular heat setting and remove them a little damp and let
them air dry. You can fluff the towel real good when it's dry to make
it softer.
As the towels get older they will lose there nap and
absorbency and will have to be replaced.
Hope this ends any
confusion...
Sorry for being so anal about this. But I want you guys to
always have a flawless, perfect paint finish.
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