Re: Rubber blooms?

Re: Rubber blooms?

  Home | Guides | Register Now! | Search | About
 alt.home.cleaning    Post an article   get this group's latest topics as an RSS feed add this group's latest topics to your My MSN content add this group's latest topics to your My Yahoo content
 Re: Rubber blooms? Michael A. Ball Reply Send to a Friend   Print
 
Subject Author Date
Rubber blooms? casioculture 03-24-2006
On 24 Mar 2006 16:35:44 -0800, casioculture@gmail.com wrote:

>I bought some plastic brooms (they look like straw blooms but they're
>not natural straw, they're like some thin synthetic material) and saw
>the store also had some rubber blooms. I thought about getting one but
>hesitated. Are those things useful or just gimmicks? Are they better
>than the regular synthetic brooms?

I like the synthetic straw brooms, IF the bristles have flocked tips--to make
the fuzzy
and fit into crevices better. For outdoor sweeping unflocked tips are better.
Either
version is easy to wash out, making them as good as new.

I've a hair removal brush with scads of short rubber fingers that does a good
job, but I
have not tried the broom version.

I've a "The Magic Broom" that has a [bristles shaped], replaceable foam pad
instead of
bristles. On smooth floors, it leaves nothing, period. On floors that are not
smooth, it
still des a great job, but it might require more than one pass. If it gets wet,
no
problem, because you can rinse it out and let it dry. It will be good as new.
Oh, the foam
pad generates a static charges that attracts pet hair; what a bonus! The broom
has an
aluminum handle; so, the whole thing weighs less that one pound.

The source was Bed, Bath & Beyond.

Zildjan: world class cymbal of excellence.


other useful resources:
Government National Mortgage Association - Ginnie Mae
The National Home Equity Mortgage Association
Fannie Mae Mortgage
Movie-Corner.com Movie Blog