Features
- Microfiber
- Super Soft and Effective Cleaning: Experience the super soft and highly effective cleaning power of our microfiber cleaning cloth. It effortlessly cleans and dries your kitchen, windows, cars, and other surfaces using only water or a gentle cleaner. Rest assured, it won't scratch paint or leave any marks, even with long-term use
- Exceptional Absorbency and Durability: Our quick-drying microfiber cleaning towels have an impressive ability to absorb up to seven times their weight in liquid. They maintain their absorbency and softness even after numerous washes, ensuring long-lasting performance
- Lint-Free and Gentle on Surfaces: Crafted from a blend of 87% Polyester and 13% Polyamide, our microfiber cleaning supplies are completely lint-free and gentle on delicate surfaces. They are perfect for cleaning kitchen surfaces, glass, finishes, and more without leaving any scratches
- Multi-Purpose Cleaning Cloths: This 24 pack of microfiber rags comes in six different colors, providing convenience for various cleaning tasks. They are ideal for wiping glass surfaces, leaving no lint or scratches. Whether it's house-cleaning, dusting, drying, or car care, these versatile cloths have got you covered
- Reusable and Washable: Our cleaning cloths are machine washable, making maintenance a breeze. Simply toss them into the washer and dryer, saving you time and energy. Thanks to their premium material, these lint-free cloths can be reused for an extended period of time, ensuring value and sustainability
Specifications
Color | Multicolor |
Size | 24 Pack |
Unit Count | 24 |
A 24-pack of 11.5 x 11.5 inch microfiber cleaning cloths in six colors, made from 87% polyester and 13% polyamide. The lint-free, quick-drying cloths absorb up to seven times their weight, are safe for delicate surfaces and paint, and are machine washable for repeated use.
Orighty Microfiber Cleaning Cloth 24 Pack, Highly Absorbent Cleaning Supplies, Lint Free Cloths for Multiple-use, Powerful Clean Rags for House, Kitchen, Car Care (Multi-Color) 11.5 x11.5 inch Review
A good microfiber cloth is one of those tools you only notice when it fails. After several weeks rotating a 24-pack of the Orighty cloths through my kitchen, bathroom, and garage, I found myself noticing them for the right reasons: reliable absorbency, fast dry times, and a price that makes it easy to keep a dedicated cloth for every task.
Design and feel
Each cloth measures about 11.5 x 11.5 inches—smaller than many shop towels and notably thinner than premium auto-detailing microfiber. The fabric is a typical 87% polyester / 13% polyamide blend, with a low pile that feels soft to the touch. Edges are cut with a scalloped finish rather than hemmed. I expected that to fray, but after repeated cycles through the washer and dryer, the edges stayed tidy.
The pack comes in six colors. I used that to set up a simple color-coding system—blue for glass and mirrors, green for kitchen counters, yellow for bathroom, and so on. It’s a small thing, but it reduces cross-contamination and makes it easier to find the right cloth at a glance. There are no tags sewn into the fabric (care instructions live on the packaging), which I appreciate because tags tend to scratch delicate surfaces or catch on fixtures.
Absorbency and quick-dry performance
Despite the thin profile, the Orighty cloths soak up more liquid than they look like they should. A single cloth comfortably handled the usual kitchen spills—condensation rings, a knocked-over juice glass, the water that inevitably pools around the sink. Folding the cloth in quarters adds structure and increases usable surface area; unfold and refold to expose fresh sections as you go.
For larger messes, I still needed a second cloth or a thicker towel. That’s not a slight against these; it’s simply a function of surface area and GSM. Where they shine is in speed: they grab liquid quickly and wring out cleanly, and they dry fast enough on a rack that I can reuse them later in the day without that stale, damp smell. In practice, the quick-dry feature matters more than headline absorption numbers because it keeps a small rotation serviceable throughout the day.
Streak and lint performance
Glass and glossy surfaces are the real test for microfiber. The Orighty cloths did well on mirrors, windows, phone screens, and a black glass cooktop. Used slightly damp with water or a spritz of glass cleaner, they left minimal to no lint and didn’t drag. On stainless steel, a damp pass followed by a dry buff took care of fingerprints without hazing.
They’re also gentle. I used them on a piano-black dashboard and painted cabinets without scratching. For car paint, I’d use these for interior dusting, wheel cleaning, and door jambs rather than final buffing—more on that below—but I didn’t see any evidence of marring in careful tests.
Everyday versatility
A thin, small cloth seems like a compromise on paper, but it’s an advantage in everyday cleaning:
- Kitchen: Wiping counters, drying dishes, and catching splatters around the stove. The smaller size lets me wrap around faucet bases and handles easily.
- Bathroom: Quick mirror touch-ups, sink wipe-downs, and the daily rinse-and-dry on countertops. They squeegee water off tile surprisingly well.
- Glass and electronics: No lint on monitor and TV screens when used dry. A light mist on the cloth (not the device) handled smudges.
- Car care: Excellent for interior dusting, wiping screens and trim, and general-purpose cleaning. Not my pick for exterior drying or wax removal—more on that next.
- Dusting: Used dry, the fibers pick up fine dust instead of pushing it around. A quick shake outside resets the cloth between passes.
Where they fall short
These aren’t high-pile, high-GSM towels. If you’re looking to dry a car after a full wash, you’ll need larger, plusher drying towels. Likewise, buffing off a thick wax or sealant is faster with a denser microfiber that offers more bite and cushioning.
The small footprint means you’ll use more cloths for large surfaces. Cleaning a big slider door or tackling a garage spill takes two or three. The upside is that the thin fabric rinses out instantly and dries rapidly; the downside is throughput on big jobs.
Durability and care
After dozens of wash cycles, the Orighty cloths retained their shape and most of their softness. The pile isn’t luxurious to begin with, so the “new cloth” feel doesn’t change much with use. I didn’t see edge fraying, and colors held well.
Care is straightforward, but it matters:
- Wash microfiber separately to avoid picking up lint from cotton.
- Skip fabric softener and dryer sheets; they coat fibers and reduce absorbency.
- Use mild detergent and cool-to-warm water. Hot water is fine occasionally for sanitation, but not every time.
- Tumble dry low or air dry; they’ll be ready quickly either way.
Even with proper care, microfiber has a finite life. The Orighty cloths are affordable enough that I’m comfortable demoting stained or heavily soiled pieces to garage duty (brake dust, grout sealing, oily tasks) and pulling a fresh cloth for kitchens or glass.
Hygiene and organization
The multi-color pack is ideal for zoning: one color for food prep, another for bathrooms, a separate one for windows. I keep a small bin labeled with each zone and rotate through them during the week. Because they dry so fast, I’m less inclined to leave a damp cloth balled up somewhere, which is half the battle against musty smells. If you struggle with cloths going sour, these help simply by being thin and quick-drying.
Value and sustainability
A 24-pack puts a lot of microfiber within reach for not much money per cloth. That encourages best practices—switching to a clean cloth mid-task rather than pushing on with a saturated one—and cuts down on paper towel use in a meaningful way. From a sustainability standpoint, reusability is only as good as the product you’ll actually use; the Orighty cloths are convenient enough that I reach for them first, which is the point.
Comparisons and use-case fit
If your priorities are:
- Quick daily wipe-downs, glass cleaning, and multi-surface dusting: These are a great fit.
- Heavy-duty absorption (flooded floors, car drying, shampoo extraction): Look to larger, thicker towels for those jobs.
- Paint correction and final buffing: Choose higher-pile, edgeless microfiber designed for that task; these can still play a supporting role for prep and cleanup.
One note on edges: while the scalloped cut behaved well in my testing, I still avoid rubbing edges against ultra-soft finishes. It’s a good habit with any microfiber, regardless of brand.
Tips for getting the most out of them
- Fold into quarters to create eight clean faces; rotate as you clean.
- Lightly dampen for glass; too wet increases streaking.
- Keep a dedicated set for high-grease work (stoves, wheels) so you don’t cross over to glass or countertops.
- Hang over a bar or faucet between tasks; airflow is your friend.
- Retire stained or compromised cloths to garage or outdoor duty instead of tossing them.
The bottom line
The Orighty cloths aren’t trying to be everything. They’re thin, compact, and surprisingly capable. In daily use, those traits add up to a workhorse cloth that’s easy to reach for, dries fast, and doesn’t shed lint on sensitive surfaces. They don’t replace plush towels for heavy absorption or paint finishing, but they absolutely earn a place as the go-to for kitchens, bathrooms, glass, and general cleaning.
Recommendation: I recommend these for anyone who needs a large, affordable stack of reliable microfiber for everyday tasks. They’re especially good if you value quick drying, low lint on glass, and color-coding your cleaning. If your primary needs are car drying, thick-wax buffing, or single-towel spill control, you’ll want to pair them with a few heavier towels—but for everything else, this pack delivers consistent performance and strong value.
Project Ideas
Business
Mobile Car Detailing Service
Use the microfiber pack to launch a low-overhead mobile car-detailing service. Color-code cloths for interior, exterior, glass, and wheel use to avoid cross-contamination. Starter expenses: basic tools, polish/cleaner inventory, waterless wash options, and branding. Price tiers: exterior wash, interior detail, full detail. Upsell: fabric protection, headlight restoration. Promote via local Facebook groups, Nextdoor, and flyers; first-time discount and subscription maintenance plans (monthly/quarterly) drive recurring revenue.
Eco-Friendly Home Cleaning Kits to Sell Online
Assemble curated kits: e.g., 'Starter Zero-Waste Clean Kit' (6 cloths, refillable glass spray bottle with concentrate, care card). Package attractively in recyclable boxes and offer customization by color. Sell on Etsy, Shopify, or farmers markets. Key margins come from value-add packaging, printed instruction cards, and small-batch manufacturing. Cross-sell instructional PDFs or video guides on sustainable cleaning practices.
Subscription Replacement & Rotation Service
Offer a subscription where customers receive replacement microfiber cloths every 3–6 months plus optional laundry rotation (pick-up/drop-off for multi-family or small-business clients). Subscription tiers: home (monthly pack), business (restrooms, kitchens, offices). This creates predictable recurring revenue and can be bundled with branded cloths and stain-resistant treatments. Promote via local business outreach (cafes, salons) and residential community groups.
Branded Corporate & Event Merchandise
Customize cloths with heat-transfer logos or attach a branded card and sell as promotional items for trade shows, car dealerships, or real-estate closings. Offer bulk pricing and co-branded packaging for businesses that want eco-conscious swag. Provide a white-label option for janitorial companies and property managers who want a consistent, color-coded cleaning program.
Workshops & DIY Craft Kits
Host in-person or virtual workshops teaching people how to make the spa kits, coasters, or organizers using microfiber cloths. Charge per attendee and sell take-home kits (cloths pre-cut, thread, backing, instructions). Partner with community centers or local craft stores. Workshops build brand awareness and move product while positioning you as an expert in sustainable crafting.
Creative
Color-coded Cleaning Roll Organizer
Sew a compact roll that stores 6 cloths (one of each color) in labeled pockets for specific tasks (kitchen, glass, car, electronics, bathroom, dusting). Add a snap or tie to close. Use simple straight stitches or a sewing machine; optionally add clear vinyl pockets and a loop for hanging. Result: a travel- or cupboard-ready organizer that keeps cloths sanitary and accessible — great as a gift or swap-meet item.
Reusable Spa & Makeup Pad Set
Cut cloths into circles or squares and edge-stitch them to create soft, reusable makeup remover rounds and small facial towels. Package sets in a small cotton drawstring bag (use one of the cloth colors for the bag lining) and include a natural soap sample and care card. Sell as eco-friendly 'zero-waste' spa kits or gift them as bridesmaid presents.
Pet Grooming Mitts and Mini Bath Towels
Turn cloths into single-hand grooming mitts by folding and top-stitching one half to create a pocket for your hand; add elastic at the wrist. Make matching small bath capes or drying wraps for small dogs/cats by stitching two cloths together with a velcro or snap closure. Microfiber's absorbency and softness make it ideal for pet grooming — offer themed sets (e.g., 'Puppy Bath Kit').
Absorbent Coasters & Placemat Sets
Layer a microfiber square over a thin cork or felt backing and stitch around the edges to make absorbent drink coasters that trap condensation. Combine several sewn-together cloths with quilt batting between for quick-drying placemats. Use multi-color layouts for fun patterns; finish edges with bias tape or blanket stitch. These are practical, quick-to-make home goods ideal for craft fairs.
DIY Mini Cleaning Station for Crafts
Create a portable mini cleaning station that crafters can keep on their table: fold cloths into a compact canvas pouch with labeled compartments (glass, brushes, spills). Include a small spray bottle labeled 'water' (or diluted cleaner) and a brush. Market to hobbyists (model makers, painters, jewelry makers) who need lint-free, absorbent rags at hand.