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Rug on carpet - non slip underlay recommendation needed

(15 Posts)
JessM Sun 04-Nov-12 16:48:12

MIL has a cream fitted carpet in the hall. A collection of rugs are in use to protect it from dirty shoes and her carrying cups of tea.
Yes I know, not a great plan with a very disabled person who lives on her own. ANd they don't lie flat.
I have looked on amazon for a way of sticking rug to carpet. Not great reviews for any products.
Any ideas or recommendations?

Granny23 Sun 04-Nov-12 16:56:20

When children were young and coming in with bicycles, etc. we had a long clear plastic runner with bumps on the back to grip the carpet. Not pretty, but it did the job until we could afford laminate flooring.

JessM Sun 04-Nov-12 18:59:08

That is a thought. There is a bit of a family "its got to look right" think with my ILs. Hell is freezing over, but does the house look like a show home? Not sure if this option would pass muster. But definately a thought. thanks

harrigran Sun 04-Nov-12 19:20:07

Cats claws rug grippers.

JessM Mon 05-Nov-12 17:20:04

Thank you, that is useful. it is a case of finding the right words to put into google sometimes.

kittylester Mon 05-Nov-12 17:36:22

Lakeland do something. We have a big mat just inside the front door which we hold down with yellow double sided sticky stuff that comes on a roll. One disadvantage of it though is that it comes up if you use a strong hoover on it. We use a GTech electric 'ewbank' on it. I think they also do cats claws.

artygran Mon 05-Nov-12 22:21:09

Good carpet shops usually sell 'rug stop' underlay to put between rugs and carpets, which can be cut to size. I've used it and it is effective. There is also one to go between rugs and hard floors which is very effective.

daisy23 Fri 01-Mar-13 06:03:02

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HildaW Fri 01-Mar-13 15:24:14

When FIL came home from hospital after a fall and a bit of a 'turn' he had a home assessment for his continued health and welfare....you coping for himself and limiting potential falling problems. The first thing on the list was to get rid of ALL rugs.

HildaW Fri 01-Mar-13 15:29:26

OOPs pressed wrong button!
I ment to add that it might seem a bit drastic but once he realised that it was to help stop more incidents that needed trips to A&E he soon came around. He too had a cream carpet but to be honest he hardly noticed the accumulating tea and coffee stains. We just took a VAX around once a month to get rid of worse. One of the benefits of failing eye-sight is that you dont see the stains so much. Seriously, you wont see rugs of any kind in care homes etc, they are potential disasters because even the fittest oldie can have a most alarming bone breakage from just a slight fall.

Galen Fri 01-Mar-13 16:03:36

I have an inlaid coconut fibre mat laid into a recess just inside my front door. This stops dirt being trampled into the house.

Deedaa Fri 01-Mar-13 17:18:58

My MiL always insisted on covering her carpet with rugs. Lots of them were just square carpet samples and eminently fall overable. She also shuffled around in lethally dangerous mules and got very cross if anyone told her not to.
Surprise, surprise she is now confined to a chair and unable to walk after a couple of falls too many. "I never thought I'd end up like this" is a favourite comment!

HildaW Sat 02-Mar-13 19:20:31

'Turtlemats' are quite good at staying put. You just need one on the inside of each door to act as barrier and collect up worse. But scattered rugs are really silly for the less fit or older person.

jessicawatson Fri 22-Aug-14 06:02:19

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MiceElf Fri 22-Aug-14 06:36:50

Reported