CROWDFUNDING REVIEW – How many paper towels do you throw away in a day, week, month, year? I know we use a combination of paper towels that come on a roll and paper napkins at my house. Convenient? Yes. Wasteful? Definitely. Is there a better alternative to paper towels? That’s where the Yowel comes in. Let’s check it out.
What is a Yowel?
Yowel is an eco-friendly and reusable/washable alternative to expensive one-use regular paper towels.
According to Yowel:
Globally, discarded paper towels account for 254 million tons of trash every year.
The problem with any conversation on sustainability is defining it. For instance, most cotton towels are made with an incredible amount of pesticides and are shipped from overseas. So, the pollution on the front end is enormous. The primary way to combat this is with certified organic cotton. However, due to the expense you will then dramatically lower the adoption in the mainstream marketplace which is really where we think we can do the most good. For instance, we believe that each pack of Yowels will cut the paper towel use by 90 rolls. If you have 10,000 people trading in their paper towels, we can save 900,000 rolls of paper towels along with the plastic they’re wrapped, the diesel from the truck that delivers them, the CO2 that produces them, and the methane produced through the decomposition of the paper. Even if you cut that in half, that’s saving 450,000 rolls.
What’s in the package?
- A countertop or under counter dispenser that includes 40 towels
- Drawstring mesh washing bag
- Adhesive hook for the washing bag
Design and features
Yowel sent me both versions of their dispensers. There’s the countertop version which is designed to sit on a counter, table, workbench, etc. It’s made of plastic and features two openings. There’s one on the front and one on top.
The base has non-skid feet.
The idea is that you pull one of the Yowels from the front slot and you can insert clean Yowels in from the top slot. Note that you don’t have to fold them. Just smoosh them in.
The towels themselves are made of soft viscose and polyester.
They might look meshy and delicate, but they aren’t. You can drench them in water, use them to scrub stains and dirt, then rinse, ring out the water, and repeat.
Each dispenser comes with 40 Yowels and each Yowel can be washed and dried 100-150 times. That’s at least 4000 uses from one set of Yowels.
Here is the under cabinet version of the Yowel dispenser. If you look closely, you can see that my samples were 3D printed. That’s because they are prototypes.
I prefer the countertop version because as you can see from the image above, I already have an under cabinet paper towel holder.
Once your Yowel is dirty, instead of throwing it away, you can put it in the mesh bag and wash/dry them with the rest of your laundry. I stuck the Yowel laundry bag on the side of my dryer and just throw the soiled Yowels in there when I bring down other kitchen towels.
According to Yowel, the towels can be washed and reused 150 or more times without degrading. Don’t try that with your traditional paper towels!
What I like
- Reusable
- Soft
- Less expensive than buying packages of paper towels over and over again
What I’d change
- It would be nice to know where Yowels can be recycled
Final thoughts
We’ve mainly been using the Yowels as a replacement for our one-use paper napkins and for cleaning up messes in the kitchen. When we use them as a napkin, we will sometimes use them more than once (depending on what we had to eat). It reminds me of when I was a kid and we had cloth napkins that my mom made and napkin rings with our initials on them. We’d use them all week and then switch them out for clean ones.
I like that Yowels last much longer than traditional paper towels and napkins, and are saving me money. I just wonder if there’s a way to recycle the worn-out Yowels once they are no longer able to be used.
Update 6/23/22
I’ve continued to use the Yowel towels for the past 6 months and don’t see changing that. I really like them – a lot. We’ve not purchased any new paper napkins in 6 months and I even started using the Yowel towels to clean up messes on the kitchen counter so we haven’t purchased many rolls of traditional paper towels in awhile either. I really like that I can use them and then wash them. They’ve been holding up great with no signs of breaking down/falling apart yet after multiple washes.
Price: $43 and up
Where to buy: Indiegogo INDEMAND
Source: The sample for this review was provided by Yowel.
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When you have 10 dogs, and several of them are seniors while some of the others like to mark…you go through a lot of paper towels. Not sure these would serve our needs, as I wouldn’t want to store urine soaked towels in the laundry room, nor would I necessarily want to wash and reuse them.
Came here to say the same, but about cats re/occasional barf and/or standard hairballs. Still, for regular spills & etc., I have a pail of microfiber clothes under the sink, and paper towels for the puke.
Nice review. I purchased my Yowel to be environmentally friendly. These will never fully replace the use of paper towels, but I do expect a reduction. I’m still trying to figure out the balance between using the Yowel’s and disposable paper, but I’ve only had it for two weeks.
The one tings that I do wish they would change is the color of the Yowels. I do not like the almond and would prefer a solid white, but that might be in the future generation this gets some market share.
Hi Jennifer, I’m still using mine. We completely switched from using disposable paper napkins for meals to the Yowels. We use them for 3 or so days and then throw them in the wash. They are holding up nicely.
I just received mine that I had purchased through the crowd funding campaign a year ago. Excited to use them! I don’t see any specific washing instructions anywhere in the packaging or the online manuals. Thinking I will just wash them with my whites on the usual delicate cycle and dry at the usual temperature. I had been cutting back on paper towel usage when it comes to my weekly bathroom cleaning as well as the occasional need for wiping down dusty stuff or messes around the house by using micro fiber towels. I happened to see a box of 30 at Walmart earlier this year for I think $10. I mainly use them upstairs which is where my laundry room is. I keep a bin on top of the washer for the dirty ones and toss them in the washer whenever I’m doing a load.
I put them in with my kitchen towels both in the wash and dryer. So far so good. They still look and feel like new but maybe a little softer.
Hi! I just received my yowels. There are no washing instructions.
Could you tell me how you have been washing yours? Do you keep them inside the mesh bag or throw them in separately. Thanks for any help!
I only put them in the mesh bag to collect them for the wash but when I wash them, I take them out and put them in with the rest of my kitchen towels.
The Real Person!
The Real Person!
I’ve had my yowels for well over a year and we love them. I was a “2 roll of paper towels a week” person to a “I’m still working on my 2nd roll of paper towels since we got the yowels” person.
I toss them in with whatever I’m washing when the mesh bag gets fullish (I take them out of the bag to wash them). About once a month I’ll collect them all (even the clean ones) and put them into the sanitize cycle of our washer. Hot water and a second rinse. I started this when I noticed some of the yowels had a bit of a old cooking oil smell.
I will buy more yowel towels when mine don’t work any longer. They’ve been washed in excess of 50 times each and although a bit thinner looking, they still work great.