I understand using dish rags and wash cloths for cleaning the kitchen and bathrooms instead of paper towels, but cloth napkins? I just don't see any cost benefit to doing this. We have some cloth napkins that are used only during holidays and when there are guests over. Other than that, the paper napkins make their way into our hands.
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Paper Napkins - Cloth Napkins Challenge
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cloth. I just throw them into the washer after a meal and they sit in there until the next load of laundry is washed.
I know the paper ones are cheap, but my kids could easly go thru a package of 300 in less than a week.
I probably have 40-50 cloth napkins total, plus some holiday ones that I received as gifts. The napkins for everyday use sit in a copper wire basket in the center of our table
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Originally posted by TheTexan View PostI understand using dish rags and wash cloths for cleaning the kitchen and bathrooms instead of paper towels, but cloth napkins? I just don't see any cost benefit to doing this. We have some cloth napkins that are used only during holidays and when there are guests over. Other than that, the paper napkins make their way into our hands.
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Just wondering how many of us (probably not many) still use an old fashioned hankie???
I carry one in my purse (so do my daughters). Rarely do they actually get used though. But, it seems like if I have kleenex in my purse for more than a few days, they get torn up. So, the hankie is there for emerg use. Then if a cold hits me, I put in kleenex.
I think we are becoming a disposable society, and our grandchildren and future generations will pay for it down the road.
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napkins instead of paper towels.
i recently had a valentines party at our home and i always use white linen tableclothes on all of my tables... and the appropriate placemats for the theme of the party.... colorful candles, and bowls.. i received a few lovely compliments...
some of my guests made comments about, i should have used paper plates, i used china, and i should have used paper napkins... i just smiled..
i haven't purchased paper towels, napkins, in almost 2 yrs... my aunt gave me some from the hallmark store... a friend gave them to her... i am still using them and that was 2 xmas's ago, they were for all the different holidays.. bags of the stuff... i do enjoy going to garage sales sometimes... i find alot of new items marked down at kohls... like dish towels... i purchased 18 white valentine tshirts, various sizes for $1.25 each... male and female ones...3 xmas long sleeved tshirts for women at $2 each.. 1 short sleeve white tshirt for a girl for a $1. i purchased 2 pairs of nice dark green pants for women for $3 each... one is for my sis...and i purchase a nice dark green pair of capris for $3....everything is well made and name brand.... today....
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This post has been going awhile and its been several years since I commented on it. I haven't bought any paper napkins now for well over 2 years. With just the two of us, it isn't a huge savings, but it is there. As it doesn't take any extra water or soap to wash, there is no extra cost to using them. Cloth napkins can last through several meals before they need washed. We also switched to hankies for the most part. Hubby prefers them. Although we do reserve paper tissues for gross big blows if you get my drift. The savings on tissues has been huge! Like the napkins, no extra cost for washing them, and my hankies are lined dried along with all my clothes. I use about one roll of paper towels a year and that is usually to absorb bacon grease. I use rags for everything else. Rags are old worn out towels, with holes, etc.
Little things do add up. Plus the stuff that didn't gets used, doesn't have to be thrown away filling up our landfills. Plus we didn't have to spend money to buy them.
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Cloth napkins are really great, but it takes so much time and efforts keeping them fresh and clean! Why don't we use paper ones? They can be very decorative and, if made of 3-ply paper, they are rather durable and give impression of high quality fabric - even by touch! At the same time, they are cheaper than cloth napkinsand do not need washing (another way of saving money).
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Sonja, if you are in North America, would you tell us the brand name and price on these high quality paper napkins? I'm sceptical that they are cheaper than cloth napkins. I have some calico napkins that are thirty years old now. Whatever price I might have paid, I think it would come out way ahead of buying paper. In fact, though, I got these napkins second hand and free. Other napkins have been sewn from men's shirts and scraps of fabric. Some nicer white linen ones for special occasion tables I have purchased. Some huge ones were 25 cents each at Big Lots. They double as kitchen towels. A pack of colorful dishcloths are also used as napkins, especially when we are serving something messy. Inexpensive, and cute as they match my favorite table cloth.
I flat out think cloth makes a nicer napkin than paper, though there are some pretty good paper ones. But the price? Nah, I don't think I want to spring for them."There is some ontological doubt as to whether it may even be possible in principle to nail down these things in the universe we're given to study." --text msg from my kid
"It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." --Frederick Douglass
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Joan.of.the.Arch, sorry for not answering you at once.
Of course, when it comes to high-quality paper napkins, when they are 3-ply, or even 4-ply napkins, when they are imprinted, specially customized or personalized, they can be rather expensive for everyday use. And, I would agree, a set of durable linens is more practical. But when we use plain paper napkins (even made from brown, unbleached paper), we can just dispose of them and really save on washing. Definitely, we can save time. And, as they say, time is money
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Originally posted by Radiance View PostMy cloth napkins don't really add to my laundry time.
As soon as they are dirty I drop them in the empty washer, they get cleaned with whatever is next load.
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