by BretMan » August 31st, 2007, 8:49 pm
For glove cleaning I've been using some nylon scrubbing pads I found real cheap at a flea market. Kind of a funny story about the pads...
My wife and I hit a few flea markets when we get the time, and if we're on vacation we try to visit ones in the area. One of the things I joke about is the proliferation of Asian-owned "dollar item" sellers that seem to be at every flea market in the country!
In the last few years we have been to flea markets close to home, in Columbus, all around the state of Ohio, in Florida, Pennsylvania, Virginia, both North and South Carolina and even in Hawaii. At almost every one of these flea markets we see the exact same cheap "dollar" items, neatly spread out, usually in cardboard Chiquita bananna boxes, and always being sold by an Asian vendor.
Has anyone else noticed this? Is there some vast network of Asian immigrants employed in the dollar item flea market trade? What's up with that?
Anyhow, one of the items they all seem to carry- mixed in with the screwdrivers, tennis balls and socks- is a package of these nylon covered sponges, or scrubber pads. They sell six for dollar and do an amazing job at cleaning gloves. They nylon is kind of nubby, but not so rough as to damage the leather, and the pads are fairly durable. I can usually clean 15 or 20 gloves with one before tossing it.
Combined with Fast Orange, these little pads are one of the best things I've found to clean gloves- and I found them while visiting flea markets looking for gloves!