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Feather Dusters

(32 Posts)
OldHag Sat 09-Oct-21 12:46:50

Hi everyone

I'm looking for some advice on feather dusters, I've tried various of the extending handled, modern so called 'feather dusters', which are made of anything everything except feathers, and tend to get matted up, and horrible after using a few times. I'm now thinking of trying a REAL feather duster, but never having bought one, or even used one before, don't know whether they are any better than the man made versions, whether the feathers fall out, etc. Do you Grans have any thoughts on this subject, or indeed recommendations as to the best type to buy?

tickingbird Sun 17-Oct-21 22:46:05

I have an Ostrich feather duster which was ridiculously expensive from John Lewis. I like it to do my blinds and shutters. It’s also good for light fittings and fiddly things. I shake it outside after each use although one of the feathers dropped out!

HumblePie Sun 17-Oct-21 19:46:41

I bought myself an excellent 6'5 man to foungbround my ornaments. He uses a microfibre cloth and the OXO good grip microfibre duster from John Lewis. Perfect for hard to reach foungbrounding and the man is self-cleaning. My real feather duster moulted more than my cats so I wouldn't recommend it.

PollyTickle Sun 17-Oct-21 19:39:27

Half a dozen of those in a vase could look quite smart TillyTrotter. Do they come in bright colours?

TillyTrotter Sun 17-Oct-21 15:52:46

This thread has had me laughing what with the cleaning language all-it’s-own, and using husbands instead of dusters ?
I use these things from Dunelm. They are not feather but they are cheap and effective.
Use, slide the mop head off and wash them once a week. They dry quickly.

kittylester Sun 17-Oct-21 15:42:47

Lakeland sell those woolly things on a stick grandetante. I have a short one and one that extends almost to the top of our 'cathedral' ceiling. The heads are removable and washable. I use my feather duster for house plants

grandtanteJE65 Sun 17-Oct-21 14:20:07

I gave up real feather dusters years ago, when I found a kitten enthusiastically killing one!

I use dusters with extendable handles and fake fur dusters that can be taken off and washed, but I don't know if you can get them in the UK as I buy mine in Germany.

Nannagarra Sun 17-Oct-21 11:54:37

As I age I’m finding it increasingly difficult to lift DH to foungbround and prefer a lambs wool or an ostrich feather duster, neither of which is becoming threadbare on top! ?

Josianne Sun 17-Oct-21 09:05:15

PollyTickle

Do you have a very thin husband with a big mop of feathery hair grannyactivist.

Now there's a thought! My idol would have been ideal.

PollyTickle Sun 17-Oct-21 08:32:13

I think we’ve nailed it Blossoming.

PollyTickle Sun 17-Oct-21 08:11:09

Do you have a very thin husband with a big mop of feathery hair grannyactivist.

nadateturbe Sun 17-Oct-21 08:06:53

midgey

I just googled foungbround and Kittylester’s post came up!

grin

grannyactivist Sun 17-Oct-21 01:37:35

I sadly don’t have an embank and I’m afraid I never got the hang of foungbrounding, so I shall continue to use my husband to get at hard to reach cobwebs and dust. ?

Blossoming Sun 17-Oct-21 00:28:06

I foungbround my ornaments with an embank. It’s much the best way.

PollyTickle Sun 17-Oct-21 00:08:25

Ewbank

PollyTickle Sun 17-Oct-21 00:07:57

I foungbround my ornaments weekly ish with an ancient washable nylon thing on a long pole, given to me by my mother-in-law along with a embank.
What was she trying to say.

SpringyChicken Sat 16-Oct-21 23:09:24

I use the kitchen broom to dust away cobwebs on walls and ceilings and the vac's extension wand with brush attachments for ornaments, picture rails, skirting , pictures frames, mirrors and furniture. I seldom use a duster.

Nortsat Sat 16-Oct-21 19:29:19

Kitty there obviously aren’t many foungbround-ers on GN!
We may need to start a specialist foungbround-ing thread for support.

Josianne Sat 16-Oct-21 18:23:27

DiscoGran

Don't leave your fluffy duster where your naughty pup can find it though, that's all I'm saying! Naughty boy! ?

Snap!

JackyB Sat 16-Oct-21 18:21:06

Swiffer are hard to beat, they pick up everything and keep hold of it until you dispose of the mop part. I dust through the house using just the one, then bin it. If you do it once a week that doesn't work out too expensive.

I have a telescopic handle for it, so I can do cobwebs on the ceiling and get underneath everything.

Nonogran Sat 16-Oct-21 17:46:55

I have sheepskin wool ones on a stick & man made fibre ones too. I wash mine regularly and line dry. That keeps them nice. They pick up dust & webs very well. I imagine a feather duster would just move the dust whereas my dusters actually pick it up. Works well for me especially in those hard to reach places like the top of a free standing wardrobe.

kittylester Sat 16-Oct-21 13:21:54

foungbround is obviously flicking around!!!!! Honestly!! I thought everyone knew that! grin

Auntieflo Sat 16-Oct-21 13:19:12

I had an ostrich feather duster and after a while it just moulted, which was to say the least annoying, as it had been expensive.

Charleygirl5 Sat 16-Oct-21 13:14:33

Correct me if I am wrong but I thought feather dusters just flicked dust from one area to another. You need to use something on a pole to which the cobwebs and dust can stick and you can either wash and/or empty.

midgey Sat 16-Oct-21 11:46:22

I just googled foungbround and Kittylester’s post came up!

Ali08 Sat 16-Oct-21 11:19:10

kittylester

What is foungbround, please?